10 years of AM innovations Charting the course for the future of 3D printing

Source: Mesago 3 min Reading Time

Related Vendors

Nearly a decade after its debut, Formnext offers more than just an exhibition space; it provides continuous content and insights, catering to the diverse needs of the global AM community. The event remains at the forefront, showcasing the full AM process chain and driving innovation in this rapidly expanding field.

The Formnext exhibits showcase the complex, multifaceted world of Additive Manufacturing across the entire range of materials.(Source:  Mesago / Mathias Kutt)
The Formnext exhibits showcase the complex, multifaceted world of Additive Manufacturing across the entire range of materials.
(Source: Mesago / Mathias Kutt)

Additive Manufacturing has left its infancy far behind and has become established as a manufacturing technology to be reckoned with across a wide range of sectors. Formnext has continued to evolve along with the industry. Today, almost ten years after its premiere, the event has become much more than a mere trade show. Not only has the entire industry changed significantly but also the challenges faced by the organisers of Formnext. Their response has been to offer a service that goes far beyond organising the event and encompasses continuously providing the global AM community with content on the benefits to be gained from this technology.

Whereas many exhibitors presented extravagant 3D-printed designs at the first Formnext in 2015, companies now tend to concentrate on specific applications in an industrial context. “Year on year across the entire industry, increased focus is being placed on return-on-investment alongside overall technological solutions. There was a time in which a lot of companies tried out Additive Manufacturing and only acquired AM systems so that they had the technology within their company, but that phase is definitely over,” explains Sascha F. Wenzler, Vice President for Formnext at the organizer Mesago Messe Frankfurt. Nowadays, Additive Manufacturing is increasingly competing with other manufacturing technologies, and real-life business cases are often important or even decisive factors when it comes to choosing a solution. That impacts the requirements exhibitors place on Formnext. As Wenzler adds: “Companies usually need to provide a lot of consulting with this kind of technology so they want to be as targeted as possible and avoid wastage in their communication.” This aspect is gaining in importance in the world of Additive Manufacturing because the technology is being deployed in a lot of different industries: Today 3D-printers can be found in dental laboratories, on construction sites, in production buildings for machinery and airplanes and on oil rigs. They are even floating through space on the ISS.

Gallery

Used in a wide range of industries

“Our exhibitors supply all these sectors all along the upstream and downstream manufacturing processes. Formnext is the only format that addresses such a large collection of adopters and potential end-user industries with the aim of spreading the breadth of this technology in manufacturing,” explains Sascha Wenzler.

Formnext also addresses the very different users of Additive Manufacturing throughout the year with its wide-ranging content from Fon Mag, AM Field Guide, Formnext. TV, various whitepapers etc. while also helping them to find what they are looking for at the trade show.

Constant strong growth in the AM sector has led to the subject of 3D-Printing emerging at a large number of vertical trade shows focusing on one specific end-user sector. “But 3D-Printing is usually just a minor topic at these events, and the solutions presented are of course very specialized,” says Wenzler. “On the other hand, anyone who is interested in the breadth of processes or needs a customized solution with multiple manufacturing steps really needs to come to Formnext.”

Alongside manufacturers of a wide range of different 3D-printers, Formnext also showcases software and material vendors, service providers and companies active in the fields of post-processing and quality assurance. “This successful approach has proved its worth, and we are continuing to develop it in close consultation with our Advisory Board, the industry and a great many stakeholders based on market requirements.”

Mapping the Additive Manufacturing process chain is so important because companies need to do much more than simply buy a 3D-printer for their industrial applications. “They need downstream and upstream process steps that fit in with the type of deployment concerned. And it is this wide-ranging approach that visitors will find at Formnext,” explains Dr.-Ing. Markus Heering, Managing Director of the VDMA Working Group Additive Manufacturing and long-time member of the Formnext Advisory Board.

Mesago has taken the added value generated by Formnext’s unique concept and transferred it to other continents. The formats are based on the very successful original Formnext in Frankfurt but have been adapted to local conditions in relevant AM markets such as the USA, Japan and China. “We see huge potential in all these countries with companies that have not yet encountered Additive Manufacturing or so far have not utilized the benefits of this fascinating technology. We are deploying our brand formats to leverage this potential,” says Petra Haarburger, President of Mesago. (ast)

(ID:50147986)

Subscribe to the newsletter now

Don't Miss out on Our Best Content

By clicking on „Subscribe to Newsletter“ I agree to the processing and use of my data according to the consent form (please expand for details) and accept the Terms of Use. For more information, please see our Privacy Policy. The consent declaration relates, among other things, to the sending of editorial newsletters by email and to data matching for marketing purposes with selected advertising partners (e.g., LinkedIn, Google, Meta)

Unfold for details of your consent