Re: [rp-ml] New machines could turn homes into small factories

From: Terry Wohlers (tw@wohlersassociates.com)
Date: Wed Mar 23 2005 - 16:53:42 EET


I agree with Sheba and Ian. I heard about the "self-replicating machine" last week and wrote about it at http://wohlersassociates.com/Wohlers-Talk.html.

Best regards,

Terry

************
Terry Wohlers
Wohlers Associates, Inc.
OakRidge Business Park
1511 River Oak Drive
Fort Collins, Colorado 80525 USA
970-225-0086
Fax 970-225-2027
tw@wohlersassociates.com
http://wohlersassociates.com

  ----- Original Message -----
  From: Ian Gibson
  To: Rp-Ml (E-mail)
  Sent: Tuesday, March 22, 2005 11:20 PM
  Subject: Re: [rp-ml] New machines could turn homes into small factories

  Sheba

  Agreed.

  I am more than a bit concerned about this article. After closer examination
  I find that this is nothing more than a final year undergraduate project. I
  wish Dr. Bowyer all the best in his research but would prefer to see
  something a little more substantial before viewing an article like this.

  IG

  At 13:20 23/3/2005, Bathsheba Grossman wrote:
>On Tue, 22 Mar 2005, SiderWhite wrote:
> > Thought everybody on the rp-ml would be interested in this. What
> > does everybody think, how well will a self-replicating machine work?
>
>I'm not buying stock yet. Nobody has ever built a self-replicating
>machine out of anything, let alone one made purely out of an RP
>material.
>
>Anyway, isn't there a precision problem? If machine A can make parts
>to tolerance .00x", and you build machine B out of parts made by A,
>it's hard to see how the parts B makes can be better than 2 * .00x".
>By the time you get to F, is it worth the trouble?
>
>
>-Sheba
>--
>Bathsheba Grossman (831)429-8224
>Sculpting geometry bathsheba.com



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