3D Printing For Dummies is an easy reference for anyone new to the process of taking a digital file and turning it into an object in the real world. (Pretty amazing stuff, right?) It’s also a handy guide for more experienced users looking to learn the latest and greatest in additive manufacturing. Updated for the latest generation of machines and materials, this book walks you through creating models and printing 3D objects. You’ll get the scoop on the impact of these versatile machines in production and manufacturing, reuse and recycling, intellectual property design controls, and more. It’s an exciting time to get into 3D printing, and this friendly Dummies guide is here to help you do it.
Wrap your mind around the technology of 3D printing Understand how 3D printing is transforming industries Get an intro to making your own digital models Consider the pros and cons of 3D printing for your hobby or business needs3D Printing For Dummies is a perfect resource for anyone interested in learning about and taking advantage of 3D printing technology.
Very good book for beginners. It provides versatile information about 3D printing technology, a bit about its history, its variations, RepRap project, printer components, common 3D printer (RepRap) models, software used in the pre-printing process, filament types and other info (like usage of 3D printing in current market and industry).
I liked this book and I am giving it 5 stars. More reading and, more importantly, practice is needed though if you'd like to print. This book doesn't make one eligible to go and use a 3D printer. It only prepares her/him to get a vision about almost all aspects of 3D printing so s/he know how the process goes.
After receiving a gift of an entry level 3D printer, I wanted something to help inform some basic decisions around filament types, design tools, slicers, etc. The table of contents read like that would be included. However, this is geared toward a hard core hobbyist that wanted to build a new printer by printing additional parts, adding home grown electronics and Raspberry Pi drivers. It ended with a discussions of 3D printed food, robots, industrial 3D metal printing, etc. Almost nothing in this book was useful to a beginner hobbyist with a new printer.
This book is an ugly mess of trivia and not much more.
3d printing starts with the Industrial Revolution. And by the next chapter I was grateful it did not go back to Lascaux. Anyway, you will find out that Microsoft is using 3d printing for their console controllers. And it's Microsoft and not the engineers working at Microsoft.
Some useful information on 3d printing terminology, printer models, and 3d design software surrounded by a lot of fluff. The book is sporadically organized and you find yourself reading the same information in several different sections of the book.
It was a pretty good overview about 3D printing, its history and possible future, with a lot of serious hobbyist stuff (building them, etc., RepRap/Prusa mostly). Not sure how I'll apply much of the info any time soon as a library staffer with an old Dremel machine, but it was worth a read.