Precision Prototyping: The Role of 3D Printed Molds in the Injection Molding Industry

February 13, 2018

Injection molding - the process of injecting plastic material into a mold cavity where it cools and hardens to the configuration of the cavity - is best used to mass-produce highly accurate, and often complex, three-dimensional end-use parts and products. However, the development of molds for this process is often painstaking, highly expensive and time intensive.

Spotlight

Lear Corporation

Lear Corporation is a leading global Tier 1 automotive supplier that serves all of the world’s major automakers with content on more than 400 vehicle nameplates worldwide. Lear is one of the world's largest suppliers of automotive seating and E-Systems. Lear provides complete seating systems and components, as well as both traditional and high voltage/high power electronic products and E-Systems and components.

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Industry 4.0 Live Security Patching

whitePaper | October 21, 2022

The adoption of Industry 4.0 technologies into production facilities and throughout operations, such as automation, 3D printers, cloud computing, robotics, machine learning, and IIoT devices, is gaining momentum across smart manufacturing

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Four Essentials To Boosting Productivity in Factory Automation Production Lines

whitePaper | May 13, 2023

Across every major industry segment, the application of advanced digital technologies and Industry 4.0 capabilities offers manufacturers powerful new capabilities to enable flexible production, improved product quality and real-time insight into the performance of their operations. However, these factories and production lines aren’t built by themselves. Designing, engineering and building these advanced systems demand intense investment in time, resources and know-how to solve some of the world’s most complex technology challenges.

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Practical Application of the Industry 4.0 Concept in aSteel Company

whitePaper | December 29, 2020

Industrial production is driven by global competition and the need to quickly adapt to ever-changing market requirements [1–3]. Modern production was built on the experiences of the first industrial revolution, streamlining the operations of manufacturing plants; the second revolution, introducing electricity to industry.

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The R&D Tax Credit Manufacturing

whitePaper | August 5, 2022

New technologies have woven their way into the manufacturing industry in recent years, particularly spurred by the advent of the Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT). Just as consumers have been able to integrate technologies such as smart thermostats and doorbells into their homes, American manufacturing firms have leveraged new technological tools to make their workflow more automated and interconnected—improving efficiencies and output.

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Intelligent factories: toward a new frontier

whitePaper | June 3, 2022

Instantly appears in many people’s minds is of a production plant run entirely by robots. But robotics is only part of the overall technology stack that will enable today’s factories meet the demands of tomorrow’s markets. In just a few decades, industrial manufacturing has changed dramatically in the continuous effort to keep pace with ever increasing market demands. Basically, this transition has occurred in three distinct phases, each with its own pathway to success.

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OPTIMIZE WORKFLOWS WITH MOBILE ROBOTICS

whitePaper | March 3, 2022

Thanks to innovations in vision, mapping, safety and other technologies developed for self-driving vehicles, AMRs have overcome traditional barriers to automation in distribution centers (DCs) and complex manufacturing operations. They’re smart enough to “share the road” with human co-workers and other vehicles, find a different route if their original path is blocked, and respond to rapid changes in orders or logistics needs — all without human intervention. AMRs are also highly cost-effective, requiring minimal information technology (IT) or infrastructural changes and only a short integration period to learn their surroundings.

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Spotlight

Lear Corporation

Lear Corporation is a leading global Tier 1 automotive supplier that serves all of the world’s major automakers with content on more than 400 vehicle nameplates worldwide. Lear is one of the world's largest suppliers of automotive seating and E-Systems. Lear provides complete seating systems and components, as well as both traditional and high voltage/high power electronic products and E-Systems and components.

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