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Arburg exhibit at Fakuma 2023

06.10.2023

ARBURGadditive: Industrial 3D printing with Freeformer 750-3X and TiQ 2

  • Freeformer 750-3X: High-temperature version for processing original Ultem plastic granules
  • TiQ 2: Compact 3D printer will produce robotic grippers from reinforced filament
  • ARBURGadditive: Comprehensive range of products for industrial additive manufacturing

Arburg will be present at Fakuma 2023 with nine exhibits on stand 3101 in Hall A3, plus eleven additional machines on partner stands. In the additive manufacturing area, the company will be presenting a high-temperature version of its new Freeformer 750-3X, processing Ultem 9085 original plastic granules. A TiQ 2 from innovatiQ will demonstrate the 3D printing of operating equipment and robotic grippers from fibre-reinforced filament.

ARB00194726_innovatiQ_Comtec_GreiferAt Fakuma 2023, a TiQ 2 will demonstrate the additive manufacturing of robotic grippers. The 3D printer is optimised for processing fibre-reinforced filaments.

The compact 3D printers from the TiQ series process filaments and are an ideal first step into the world of additive manufacturing. The Freeformers produce resilient functional components from original and certified plastic granules, including in hard/soft combination. These high-end machines are suitable for sophisticated applications in areas such as medical technology, the automotive industry and aerospace.

Processing of high-temperature plastics

At Fakuma, a new high-temperature version of the Freeformer 750-3X will be producing geometrically sophisticated ventilation ducts from original material Ultem 9085. To achieve this, the temperature of the build chamber can be raised to 200 degrees Celsius, and the granules are plasticised at up to 450 degrees Celsius.

ARB00183833_freeformer_750-3X_Düsen_00296The Freeformer 750-3X has three discharge units and additively manufactures resilient functional parts, including in hard/soft combination and from original plastic granules.

ARB00195661_LüfterradFor ventilation ducts made of original Ultem and other aerospace components, seamless documentation of the process data also plays an important role.

The high-end machine has three discharge units and, from the outside, is indistinguishable from the Freeformer 300-3X. However, at around 750 square centimetres, the part carrier is around 2.5 times larger. This means that larger functional parts can be produced with plastic granules using Arburg Plastic Freeforming (APF) and small batches can be additively manufactured on an industrial basis. Many APF components will be on display at Fakuma, including orthopaedic insoles as two-component parts that can be individually adapted to the footbed.

Data processing and the Gestica controller, which was developed and manufactured by Arburg in-house, have been optimised in terms of process stability, component quality and build time. The result is significantly reduced costs per part and lower material usage.

For seamless documentation and traceability of each individual part, there is the "ProcessLog" customer portal app. This allows a wide range of process and build job data from parts manufactured using the APF process to be displayed in clear graphical form and documented – which in turn ensures transparency, high part quality and can significantly reduce rejects and error rates.

Compact 3D printer processes fibre-reinforced filaments

The second machine exhibit is a TiQ 2, which can process fibre-reinforced filaments based on PA and PP, for example, using the fused filament fabrication (FFF) process. This 3D printer is particularly economical and also ideal as an entry-level additive manufacturing solution thanks to its open material system. The compact production machine has a CNC controller, metal chassis and an enclosed safety area.

ARB00184505_innovatiQ_TiQ2K2022_00577The TiQ 2 3D printer from InnovatiQ really comes into its own when processing fibre-reinforced materials for operating equipment such as devices and removal modules.

Items on show at Friedrichshafen will include resilient suction pads and mechanical grippers made of fibre-reinforced PA and PP with individualised fingers for picking up components, mounted on robot arms. In addition to the additive manufacturing of end-of-arm tooling (EAOT), the open material system is perfect for the cost-effective 3D printing of devices and other operating equipment. All 3D printers from innovatiQ are operated using the intuitive GestiQ-Pro industrial controller. The optional SmartMonitoring system allows several printers to be monitored simultaneously during production.

Photos: ARBURG

Further information about Arburg can be found at www.arburg.com

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