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Lab talk, the good, the bad, and the ugly
3D Printer
What came first the chicken or the egg? Should I design and outsource print, or go all in?
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<blockquote data-quote="sidesh0wb0b" data-source="post: 337225" data-attributes="member: 7594"><p>there is no right answer here IMHO.</p><p>you are correct, theres a steep learning curve either path. so it comes down to tolerances and time. (and capital too but since you didnt mention it...)</p><p></p><p>option 1, do you have the bodies and time to dedicate to this method? if so, its completely viable....though printed dentures are their own beast, and the sales guys like to promote them as wondrous. i would say most if not all digital dentures are sub-economy. there is a large market for that, so if its your route, go for it!</p><p></p><p>option 2, might be a better option unless you know exactly what you want to purchase for printing. this way you could sample a variety of printers and print material without the possibility of a large OOPSIE on the purchasing side of things.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="sidesh0wb0b, post: 337225, member: 7594"] there is no right answer here IMHO. you are correct, theres a steep learning curve either path. so it comes down to tolerances and time. (and capital too but since you didnt mention it...) option 1, do you have the bodies and time to dedicate to this method? if so, its completely viable....though printed dentures are their own beast, and the sales guys like to promote them as wondrous. i would say most if not all digital dentures are sub-economy. there is a large market for that, so if its your route, go for it! option 2, might be a better option unless you know exactly what you want to purchase for printing. this way you could sample a variety of printers and print material without the possibility of a large OOPSIE on the purchasing side of things. [/QUOTE]
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Lab talk, the good, the bad, and the ugly
3D Printer
What came first the chicken or the egg? Should I design and outsource print, or go all in?
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