Apr 28 2014
Airwolf 3D will be showcasing its American-made high-performance 3D printers in Booth #3125 Hall C at the 3rd USA Science & Engineering Festival taking place April 26 and 27 at the Walter E. Washington Convention Center here from 9am to 6pm daily.
Airwolf 3D has been encouraging youth and teaching teachers to build and operate 3D printers for the classroom for nearly a year. To demonstrate its commitment to the K-12 community, the company sponsored the 2014 Maker Challenge, a collaborative project of Career Technical Education of Orange County California that provided an opportunity for local students to participate in an integrated STEM design project.
For the largest science festival in the United States, Airwolf 3D will demonstrate how students can use 3D modeling and printing to design and build or significantly repurpose products that will solve problems, needs, or wants.
Airwolf 3D is noteworthy in that it uses its own 3D printers to replicate themselves nearly 24/7 at the company’s headquarters. Not only does this maintain quality control, it enables Airwolf 3D technicians to seamlessly refine and improve the machines. The process also acts as quality control (QC) to ensure the 3D printers perform flawlessly over long periods of continuous use.
Airwolf 3D’s flagship product is the AW3D HD that features a class-leading build envelope of 1,150 cubic inches (12” x 8” x 7”), making it ideal for large prototyping. Because the 3D printer is fully autonomous, no link-up to a computer is required. The AW3D HD 3D printer comes standard with Matter Control Pro host software and a six-month warranty. It’s compatible with both Windows and Mac computers and accepts 16 materials from multiple sources, making it remarkably cost efficient.