10 pointsby ndr422 months ago4 comments
  • ndr422 months ago
    I remember how they introduced the unibody Macbooks around 2009. They milled the entire enclosure from a slab of aluminium - they had to buy thousands of mills for mass-producing. Now 3d printing seems to open up even more design possibilities. But with the time to produce a watch enclosure (20+ hours) it would take days to create a Macbook enclosure.
    • jsheard2 months ago
      I think they mean 20 hours for a machine to print a whole batch, which looks to be at least ~80 watches in one of the clips. That's not quite so bad.
    • vablings2 months ago
      It looks like they are probably doing some kind of machining post processing to give a smooth surface finish. Crazy advanced manufacturing capability on show here. China is ahead of the game here compared to the west, the best comparable machine comes from Trumpf and they simple do not have the manufacturing volume to make the number of machines required.
  • gehwartzen2 months ago
    The article seems to imply that the 1/2 reduction is due to the amount scrap material from milling. Isn’t this material just recycled?
  • rkagerer2 months ago
    Which printers did they use?
  • andsoitis2 months ago
    Accelerating conspicuous consumption.
    • CharlesW2 months ago
      Also reducing raw materials consumption, by half. Related: I have bad news about the industries covered by HN.