| 
						 
						Thyssenkrupp plans to 
						open 3D printing center this year 
						
		 
		Send a link to a friend  
 
		
		
		 [April 25, 2017] 
		
		HANOVER, 
		Germany (Reuters) - German industrial group Thyssenkrupp plans to open 
		its own 3D printing center this year to manufacture products for its 
		customers, a company executive said on Tuesday. 
		 
		As well as producing steel, submarines and elevators, Thyssenkrupp 
		supplies thousands of tonnes of metal and plastic products and provides 
		supply-chain management services to a quarter of a million customers 
		worldwide. 
		 
		Some industrial components such as airline or wind-turbine parts can now 
		be made by 3D printing, or additive manufacturing, in which objects are 
		printed in layers directly from a computer design instead of being cut 
		out of blocks of material. 
		 
		This saves money on material costs by reducing the number of parts 
		needed tenfold or more, and also saves time from design to 
		manufacturing, allowing objects to be produced in small batches in a 
		cost-effective way. 
						
		
		  
						
		"We have decided... to establish our own 3D printing center. We have 
		invested already into the machines. We have invested already in the 
		people - they are there. They are already producing," said Hans-Josef 
		Hoss, an executive board member of Thyssenkrupp Materials Services 
		division. 
		 
		"We start from the engineering side and deliver the final product with 
		all aftersales and related services," he said in a speech at an event 
		during the Hannover Messe, the world's biggest industrial fair. 
		 
		Hoss said the center would be inaugurated in September, and would 
		produce both metal and plastic products. He gave no further details. 
		 
		Additive manufacturing is rapidly gaining the attention of large 
		industrial firms as the technology improves and the pressure for custom 
		manufacturing rises. 
						
		
            [to top of second column]  | 
            
             
            
			  
            
			The logo of German steel-to-elevators group ThyssenKrupp AG is 
			pictured during the company's annual news conference in Essen, 
			Germany, November 24, 2016. REUTERS/Wolfgang Rattay/File Photo 
            
			  
General Electric said on Monday it was investing 100 million euros ($109 
million) to expand a German 3D printing firm it bought last year - one of two it 
acquired at a total cost of over $1 billion - and would open a 3D printing 
customer center in Munich. 
 
GE, a leader in 3D-printed aircraft engine parts, said it had produced 50 
percent of the parts needed for a helicopter engine, slashing the number of 
parts required from 900 to just 16, reducing the weight by around 60 percent and 
cutting the related costs by 40 percent. 
 
Use of 3D technology is surging. Sales reached $1 billion in 2007, jumped to 
nearly $5.2 billion in 2015 and are expected to hit $26.5 billion by 2021, 
according to a report by Wohlers Associates, a consulting firm that analyzes the 
sector. 
 
($1 = 0.9195 euros) 
 
(Reporting by Georgina Prodhan; Editing by Hugh Lawson) 
				 
			[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights 
				reserved.] Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, 
			broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. 
			
			   |