Additive Manufacturing Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Additive Manufacturing stocks.

Additive Manufacturing Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
May 6 BURU NUBURU Announces a Second Contract With NASA for Next-Generation Blue Laser Space Technology
May 4 PRLB Proto Labs, Inc. (NYSE:PRLB) Q1 2024 Earnings Call Transcript
May 4 PRLB Proto Labs Inc (PRLB) Q1 2024 Earnings Call Transcript Highlights: Navigating Market Challenges ...
May 4 PRLB Q1 2024 Proto Labs Inc Earnings Call
May 3 PRLB Proto Labs (PRLB) Q1 2024 Earnings Call Transcript
May 3 PRLB Proto Labs, Inc. (PRLB) Q1 2024 Earnings Call Transcript
May 3 PRLB Proto Labs Inc (PRLB) Q1 2024 Earnings: Beats on EPS Estimates, Surpasses Revenue Forecasts
May 3 PRLB Proto Labs Inc (PRLB) Q1 2024 Earnings: Misses on EPS Estimates, Surpasses Revenue Forecasts
May 3 PRLB Proto Labs (PRLB) Q1 Earnings and Revenues Surpass Estimates
May 3 PRLB Proto Labs beats top-line and bottom-line estimates; initiates FY24 outlook
May 3 PRLB Protolabs Reports Financial Results for the First Quarter of 2024
May 2 PRLB Proto Labs Q1 2024 Earnings Preview
May 2 NCL Northann Corp.'s Blue11-Ocean Plastic Flooring and Wall Panels Product Wins Multiple Prestigious Awards in 2024
May 1 PRLB Paralympic Gold Medalist Creates Custom Prosthetics for Athletes through Protolabs' Digital Manufacturing Service
Apr 30 SSYS Stratasys Wants to Use 3D Printing to Promote Upcycling
Apr 30 PRLB Proto Labs (PRLB) to Report Q1 Earnings: What's in the Cards?
Apr 30 MTLS Materialise NV (NASDAQ:MTLS) Q1 2024 Earnings Call Transcript
Apr 30 DM Desktop Health™ Announces Flexcera™ Family Resins Validated for Asiga® 3D Printers, Increasing Global Access to Premium Digital Dental Applications
Additive Manufacturing

3D printing is any of various processes in which material is joined or solidified under computer control to create a three-dimensional object, with material being added together (such as liquid molecules or powder grains being fused together), typically layer by layer. In the '90s, 3D printing techniques were considered suitable only to the production of functional or aesthetical prototypes and, back then, a more comprehensive term for 3D printing was rapid prototyping. Today, the precision, repeatability and material range have increased to the point that 3D printing is considered as an industrial production technology, with the name of additive manufacturing. 3D printed objects can have a very complex shape or geometry and are always produced starting from a digital 3D model or a CAD file.
There are many different 3D printing processes, that can be grouped into seven categories:

Vat photopolymerization
Material jetting
Binder jetting
Powder bed fusion
Material extrusion
Directed energy deposition
Sheet laminationThe most common by number of users is a material extrusion technique called fused deposition modeling (FDM). This builds a three-dimensional object from a computer-aided design (CAD) model, usually by successively adding material layer by layer, unlike the conventional machining process, where material is removed from a stock item.The term "3D printing" originally referred to a process that deposits a binder material onto a powder bed with inkjet printer heads layer by layer. More recently, the term is being used in popular vernacular to encompass a wider variety of additive manufacturing techniques. United States and global technical standards use the official term additive manufacturing for this broader sense.

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