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Getting Your Head 3-D Printed

9/19/2015

1 Comment

 
Picture



Roxie Munro


Visual Thinker

So do I stick my head into that glass-enclosed rectangular box? Will it fry my brain? Or will the damage show up in 20 years? Will my head come out looking like those primitive shrunken heads that repelled and fascinated me as a child?

    I’ve volunteered to have my head 3-D printed, and am checking out the equipment at the State University of New York. As it turns out—great relief—I don’t have to stick my head into the box after all; that’s where the “printing” occurs, not the scanning. 

    The professor tells me to just sit upright and stay super still on a chair for a little over a minute, while his assistant uses a hand-held scanner—making several passes of the sides and top of my head and neck from about 30 inches away.

    In a couple minutes, the glass box starts to make noise and comes alive. The “printing” begins. For the color of my little sculpted head, I’m given a choice of red or white. Red seems a bit creepy, so I go for white. The plastic substance is long and cord-like, about 1/8 inch in diameter, and wrapped around a big spool at the back of the printer. One thin white layer after the other is laid down. It builds up, and slowly a tiny replica of my head begins to take shape. Half an hour, and it’s done. 

    Sure enough, this looks like a miniature Roxie, about 2 inches high, with a flat back where it lay down on the printer, although the machine appeared to have quit just before it reached the tip of my nose, which is kind of cut off. 
       
       So what can be done with this new kind of printing? Well, it is already being used in dentistry for making crowns. Jewelry can be created from metals, even gold. You can actually make plastic guns using this method. Unfortunately (or should I say fortunately), they don’t work very well—the plastic gets distorted rapidly from the heat and action of shooting a bullet.

    But maybe the most fun is making food. Nursing homes in Germany are taking pureed food and making it into appetizing shapes. NASA is researching making 3-D pizza in space. Instead of white plastic maybe I should have asked for chocolate—and turned myself into a delicious dessert.


Picture
Glass-sided 3-D printer box.
Picture
"Print" being built up in thin white layers.
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Getting scanned with hand-held scanner
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Mini-me.
Picture
Roxie and her mini-me.
Picture



Roxie is an illustrator as well as an author.Check out "Market Maze"... learn where your food comes from in a lively interactive informational book, with seek-n-find and a continuous maze. Answer key in the back, if you can't find your way! Starred review, Kirkus. 



_______________________________________________________________
Tomorrow you're going to enter a wolf den -- but don't be afraid.  Dorothy Hinshaw Patent will be right beside you.



1 Comment
KT
9/20/2016 03:58:21 pm

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