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3D Printing with Fusion 360

You're reading from   3D Printing with Fusion 360 Design for additive manufacturing, and level up your simulation and print preparation skills

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803246642
Length 438 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Sualp Ozel Sualp Ozel
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Sualp Ozel
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Table of Contents (21) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Design for Additive Manufacturing (DFAM) and Fusion
2. Chapter 1: Opening, Inspecting, and Repairing CAD and Mesh files FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Editing CAD/Mesh Files with DFAM Principles in Mind 4. Chapter 3: Creating Lightweight Parts, and Identifying and Fixing Potential Failures with Simulation 5. Chapter 4: Hollowing and Latticing Parts to Reduce Material and Energy Usage 6. Part 2: Print Preparation – Creating an Additive Setup
7. Chapter 5: Tessellating Models and Exporting Mesh Files to Third-Party Slicers 8. Chapter 6: Introducing the Manufacture Workspace for Print Preparation 9. Chapter 7: Creating Your First Additive Setup 10. Part 3: Print Preparation – Positioning Parts, Generating Supports, and Toolpaths
11. Chapter 8: Arranging and Orienting Components 12. Chapter 9: Print Settings 13. Chapter 10: Support Structures 14. Chapter 11: Slicing Models and Simulating the Toolpath 15. Part 4: Metal Printing, Process Simulation, and Automation
16. Chapter 12: 3D Printing with Metal Printers 17. Chapter 13: Simulating the MPBF Process 18. Chapter 14: Automating Repetitive Tasks 19. Index 20. Other Books You May Enjoy

Arranging Components Automatically

Before utilizing 3D printing, companies often compare the cost per part against traditional manufacturing methods such as injection molding or CNC machining. When evaluating 3D printing versus injection molding for producing plastic parts, the economies of scale are on the side of 3D printing for prototyping and small production runs. It will generally be cheaper to 3D print a single component than injection-molding it. However, in small batch production, in order to decrease the per part cost of a given component, it is better practice to effectively 3D arrange parts within the build volume of capable hardware such as SLS and MJF 3D printers.

To arrange components within the build volume of a plastic powder bed printer, Fusion 360 offers two workflows. The first workflow can be accessed within the DESIGN workspace. The ARRANGE command located in the SOLID tab’s MODIFY panel shown in Figure 8.20 allows us to select one or more components...

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