Prototype prints, fixtures, and short-run parts

What you get

  • Material selection - FDM or resin matched to load, temperature, and cosmetic needs.
  • Orientation & tolerance notes - Critical interfaces called out before build.
  • Post-processing - Cleanup, reaming, inserts, and basic assembly when in scope.

Good fits

  • Fixtures and jigs for shop or lab work.
  • Iteration parts before machining or molding commitments.
  • One-offs tied to CAD or scan-to-print pipelines.

Next steps

Share STL/STEP, quantity, and environment constraints via contact. We will flag when machining or vendor molding is the better path.

3D printing service image

10+

Years building products

40+

Shipped milestones

3

Disciplines in one loop

Coffee-fueled debug sessions

Contacto

Hablemos

Cuéntame qué estás construyendo, plazos y qué sería un éxito. Respondo con preguntas, un alcance propuesto o una llamada breve - lo que encaje.

Disponibilidad
Lunes a viernes (hora del Este de EE. UU.). Prioridad remota y entrega en la nube. Presencial solo con cita.

Ubicación

Zona de Filadelfia, EE. UU.

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FAQ

3D printing FAQ

Materials, tolerances, and when printed parts are the right answer vs. machining or molding.

FDM and resin workflows for prototypes, fixtures, and short-run parts - material choice follows temperature, load, and finish requirements. We will say when machining or molding is the better economics.
FDM tolerances depend on orientation, layer height, and feature size; resin is tighter for fine detail. Critical interfaces are called out in the quote with expected post-processing (reaming, tapping, sanding).
Yes. Native CAD (STEP/STL) is preferred. Scan-only inputs may need cleanup or parametric rebuild via 3D scanning before printing reliable mating features.
Basic cleanup, hole reaming, and insert installation can be included in scope. Multi-part assemblies ship with a BOM note and torque/spec callouts when fasteners matter.
Send format, material intent, quantity, and photos or drawings through the contact form. Include load, temperature, and cosmetic requirements - they change material and orientation choices.