Take a look at Xpress3D. They provide a plug in for several solid
molding programs including that gives you instant quotes on several rapid
prototyping processes including SLA.
http://www.xpress3d.com/
Alex Madsen
________________________________________
From: Rotary motors in aircraft
[mailto:flyrotary@lancaironline.net] On Behalf Of Joa
Harrison
Sent: Friday, January 21, 2005 11:48 AM
To: Rotary motors in aircraft
Subject: [FlyRotary] Re: SLAs.... was Re: titanium single rotor
Nope, I don't have an SLA
machine. Normally the casting houses will have folks they like to
work with and will include the price of the SLA
in the casting price. Of course they mark up the SLA
(as well as all tooling). You would be amazed at the mark-up for
non-recurring charges :)
Basically the sales guy (they like to call themselves "account
managers") will give you a high price and see if you gag. If you
don't then they know you "really need it" and are happy to take your
money :)
I was recently reminded of this in the extrusion industry. I went
out for quote to bunch of houses for aluminum extrusions for some new VGs
I'm developing and the both the die price and the price per pound
varied up to 350%! I also found that if I went through a
broker the prices doubled to tripled. The
moral: shop around and deal directly with the manufacturer :)
Joa
www.landshorter.com
WRJJRS@aol.com wrote:
Joa,
Do you have access to thew SLA
machine? I use SolidWorks all the time and they have the ability to output a SLA file directly. It would be great to do a clean inlet
manifold and throttle body castings. Any idea if we can buy time? Thanks,
Bill Jepson
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