with the materials, i think part of it is that instead of casting a piece in one material, with 3D printing now they can vary the material during the build:gruntguru wrote: ↑06 Jan 2020, 03:363D printing in steel or aluminium alloys is no problem, however conventional additive and subtractive techniques (eg casting and machining) are well developed and the raw materials relatively inexpensive. This is why you see 3D printing emphasis on exotic materials like titanium and nickel alloys.subcritical71 wrote: ↑05 Jan 2020, 02:45I'll stay with my opinion, that the whole block is not doable.
so they can go hard/soft, dense/lightweight, nickel alloy/steel alloy, whatever, with each tiny droplet! Being F1, i wouldn't be surprised if by now they can actually mix the exact alloy in real time as they go. It must be a whole new way of looking at designing something. They could even cool it by making some of it porous, possibly, who knows where it could lead