Mosaic Add-On to Enable Color and Multi-material in 3D Printers
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August 29, 2018
The four-year old 3D printing tech startup Mosaic, headquartered in Toronto, is releasing Palette 2, an add-on to your existing 3D printer. You can think of Palette 2 just like an external hard drive or a removable blu-ray player, something that adds new capabilities to the primary hardware. In this case, Palette 2 gives your single-color, single-material FDM (fused deposition modeling) 3D printer the ability to print in multiple colors (up to four) and multiple materials.
“Single-color, single-material 3D printers are capable of printing high quality parts, but they also limit the type of things we can print,” explains Mitch Debora, CEO and cofounder of Mosaic. “We'd like to enable both multi-color and multi-material printing because we think they're equally important.”
Color 3D Printing in FDM vs. Powder-based Inkjet
Multi-color and multi-material 3D printers are available from some leading vendors. For example, the Connex Object series from Stratasys is capable of color printing with PolyJet digital materials. The ProJet product line from 3D Systems are full-color printers. And da Vinci from XYZ Printing is a full-color 3D printer.
Palette employs FDM technology, which uses a continuous thermoplastic filament. This is different from the powder-based, polymer-based inkjet 3D printing, which is commonly used to achieve colors. Because of the thermal binding involved, FDM parts are generally considered much more durable than inkjet-style printing. Thus, for end-use parts, FDM may be more suitable; and for concept models, inkjet-printed parts may be adequate.
“With Palette, you don't need to make any modification to your existing printer,” says Debora. “It sits next to your printer. You load the Palette with multicolor filaments. Palette turns them into a single filament and feeds it into your printer.”
Printing multi-material colored parts on a printer originally designed to print monochrome parts in a single material does have an impact on the speed, because the printer's single extruder must operate differently to cope with color-switching operations. The more complex the intersecting colors are, the greater the impact on the speed might be.
Compatibility with Existing 3D Printers
Debora says Palette is compatible with all printers that use standard 1.75mm filaments. There could be issues, however, with 3D printers that restrict users to use their proprietary firmware (the slicing and preparation software). To prepare the print job with Palette, you need to use Mosaic's software, CANVAS.
The company's list of compatible 3D printers include the Raise3D N series, MakerGear M2/M3, Makerbot Replicator 2/+, SeeMe CNC, Ultimaker 2/3, and more.
“To go from single-material, single-color printing to multi-material, multi-color is not trivial,” explains Debora. “It involves reconfiguring the extruder setup. With four extruders [to accommodate multi-color, multi-material printing], the printer itself could get bigger and unwieldy.”
This, Debora points out, is the reason printer makers should look at Mosaic as a potential partner rather than a competitor. Mosaic recently struck up partnerships with six printer makers to integrate its technology directly into their products.
From Kickstarter to Amazon
Palette was born out of a Kickstarter campaign that ran back in April 2015. With 464 backers, the 30-day campaign raised CA$ 231,803 (US $179,314). It garnered coverage in Wired, Engadget, and Gizmodo, among others.
Palette 2 is priced $499 currently for preorder. Its regular price will be $599. Palette 2 PRO, with aluminum housing to protect the slicing mechanism, sells for $699 on preorder. Its regular price is $799.
Palette 2's predecessor Palette was sold through the online retailer Amazon. Debora says Palette 2 will also be available through Amazon.
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Kenneth WongKenneth Wong is Digital Engineering’s resident blogger and senior editor. Email him at [email protected] or share your thoughts on this article at digitaleng.news/facebook.
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