![]() |
Chocolate printer
Now you can print 3D in chocolate.
http://now.msn.com/money/0410-3d-chocolate-printer.aspx Just went on sale today . Right now, it looks a bit slow and expensive to buy, but I can see a real use for it. Can you imagine taking a photo of something and having the candy shop make it in chocolate? Or having some personal item like a wedding ring converted to a triple sized chocolate ring? Or chocolate reproductions of some of your body parts. -- |
Chocolate printer
Ed Pawlowski wrote:
> > Now you can print 3D in chocolate. > > http://now.msn.com/money/0410-3d-chocolate-printer.aspx > > Just went on sale today . > > Right now, it looks a bit slow and expensive to buy, but I can see a > real > use for it. Can you imagine taking a photo of something and having > the candy shop make it in chocolate? Or having some personal item > like a wedding ring converted to a triple sized chocolate ring? > > Or chocolate reproductions of some of your body parts. > -- The pictures I've seen of its output look like this machine needs more work. It doesn't look like they've got the flow control working very well. When it tried to write CHOCOLATE by stacking five layers, the bottom two were significantly fatter, probably because the chocolate was warmer and flowed faster. The top three layers were thinner and more sharply defined, presumably because the chocolate had cooled down before being printed. That said, I'm surprised they can do it at all. Chocolate has much different properties than the materials used for 3D printing, pretty much the opposite properties. It has a wide pasty range between liquid and solid, high batch-to- batch variation, supercools, etc. I'd be leery about advancing money to a start-up, especially when it looks like the engineering isn't quite finished. |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 07:09 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
FoodBanter