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#1 World’s Smallest 3D Printing Pen Lets You Draw in the Air

Posted: Tue Apr 29, 2014 11:46 pm
by frigidmagi
thisiscolossal
LIX is the latest contender in the handheld 3D-printing field. Launched just a few hours ago on Kickstarter, the developers say the super compact design is smaller than any other pen on the market and it can even be powered by the electricity from a USB port. After turning it on the LIX takes less than a minute to heat up and you’re ready to start creating vertical illustrations. Via LIX:

LIX 3D printing pen has the similar function as 3D printers. It melts and cools coloured plastic, letting you create rigid and freestanding structures. Lix has a hot-end nozzle that is power supplied from USB 3.0 port. The plastic filament ABS/PLA is introduced in the upper extremity of Lix Pen. The filament goes through a patented mechanism while moving through the pen to finally reach the hot-end nozzle which melts and cools it down. An interesting fact about this light-weight, engineered pen is that these structures can be formed in any imaginable shape.

The LIX pen has a much sleeker form and a finer tip than similar devices we’ve seen like the 3Doodler, though it’s a bit more expensive. See more on their website.
Isn't this thing kinda of a hot glue gun that shoots plastic?

#2 Re: World’s Smallest 3D Printing Pen Lets You Draw in the Ai

Posted: Wed Apr 30, 2014 12:06 am
by rhoenix
I can definitely see the use for such an idea if it can feed back one's doodling directly into a 3d sketchup program or something, but attaching the "3D printing" moniker to a hot glue gun just seems... like a cheap way of cashing in on the whole "3D printing" thing.

#3 Re: World’s Smallest 3D Printing Pen Lets You Draw in the Ai

Posted: Wed Apr 30, 2014 4:40 pm
by General Havoc
rhoenix wrote:I can definitely see the use for such an idea if it can feed back one's doodling directly into a 3d sketchup program or something, but attaching the "3D printing" moniker to a hot glue gun just seems... like a cheap way of cashing in on the whole "3D printing" thing.
I agree. This seems rather gimmicky to me at present, though perhaps the applications aren't clear enough yet.