This "Will it work in space" talk always brings to my mind the joke about how the US spent millions developing a pen that will write upside down, in zero gravity, and under water. At the same time, the Russians used a pencil.
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Quote: It is a work in progress, they want to see how well it will work in microgravity. They might have to reconfigure it somewhat, they don't know yet.
Scott
Quote:
Interesting question.... un less this its an electrostatic delivery..... like the Xerox process. I am familiar with two different types from the early days one was a vat of UV curable polymer and the other is a deposit of powder. Both those machines were in the tens of thousands of dollars....
In the past few years, before I retired, there had been a couple of players in the industry. One was Xerox and I know the printers were going down in price to about 5 grand less if you get a used one. That was back in 2009 ish. I dont watch the news or TV any more so havent kept up with the technology....my bad.
deb
oy vey
don't jinks us just yet lol
the reality is that its a good job with a good future. we just have to find the right people.
just maybe it's them