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BlueWaveNeverEnd

(13,771 posts)
Fri Feb 27, 2026, 06:12 PM Friday

The Rise and Fall of a 3-D Printing Empire, Desktop Metal, a billion-dollar start-up

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/02/27/business/3d-printing-industry.html?unlocked_article_code=1.PVA.AxSe.dfG4S1_HqgLY&smid=url-share

The Rise and Fall of a 3-D Printing Empire
Desktop Metal, a billion-dollar start-up, promised to revolutionize manufacturing. It went bankrupt, and now has much humbler ambitions as the 3-D printing industry takes a sober turn.


In the winter of 2020, Desktop Metal, a high-flying start-up just outside Boston, unveiled an industrial 3-D printer so powerful that it sounded like magic. The printer could make metal parts for jet engines, trucks and medical implants “at speeds so unheard-of,” one commercial declared, “that some people thought it wasn’t possible.”

There was just one problem: That printer, the P-50, never worked well enough to sell.

It was quietly shelved after going out to only a few customers, an early warning of how much the 3-D printing industry’s rapid growth relied on promises that have not come to fruition.

For decades, people in the 3-D printing world heralded a new industrial revolution that would replace old machines on factory floors with sleek new printers that could cheaply and efficiently transform the way that nearly everything was made.

While 3-D printers have become indispensable for certain products — customized dental implants and satellite components, for instance — adoption of the technology has lagged expectations. High interest rates, costly raw materials used by the machines and the sheer complexity of the printers have made many companies shy away from buying them.
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The Rise and Fall of a 3-D Printing Empire, Desktop Metal, a billion-dollar start-up (Original Post) BlueWaveNeverEnd Friday OP
Kick dalton99a Friday #1

dalton99a

(93,408 posts)
1. Kick
Fri Feb 27, 2026, 06:52 PM
Friday
Simon
Charlotte NC · 10h ago

I have a 3D FDM printer at home that works just fine. At my company we use 3D printers both for prototyping (in plastics) and specific production parts (in metal)

I evaluated Desk Top Metal (DTM) back around 2018. As the article noted it was hugely hyped. What the article failed to cover was the significant limitations of the process which printed raw metal parts with a binder which then required sintering. During that sintering process the parts would shrink around 15%.

This was ok if you were printing a cube. For anything more complicated the shrinkage was not uniform. You needed a lot of trial and error to get an acceptable finished part since at that time the software to predict the shrinkage as "crude" (It has since improved a lot but is still complex and expensive).

My experience was DTM glossed over this crucial issue. Given they essentially ignored reality their implosion isn't surprising. Engineers deal in the art of the possible not hype.
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