by PaulL » Fri Jun 21, 2013 11:51 am
by PaulL
Fri Jun 21, 2013 11:51 am
Mantrid, you've seen the new pics? It's coming along. I'd love to do nothing but bot work all day. Instead, I have to work with their dumbed down cousins (industrial machines).
In reading the article, I had a thought:
Imagine tiny 3D printers specializing in nothing more than making such tiny batteries, integrated into a bot, then small rails / tracks moving them to where needed, and moving old ones in need of replacement to... Well, it's a kind of excretion. Consume materials to create the batteries, excrete the materials when used up. Imagine if the efficiency was such that the power generated was sufficient enough to sustain the entire bot. That's a bit out there, huh?
What's for lunch today? Battery acid.
I imagine something similar in the world of nano technology, rebuilding parts that make up a whole.
It's an interesting question - how small can a 3D printer be? You could make one with a few small continuous rotation servos (need some kind of position feedback) and some screws and nuts. A smaller version might be electromagnetic, that could be pretty tiny.
Paul
Mantrid, you've seen the new pics? It's coming along. I'd love to do nothing but bot work all day. Instead, I have to work with their dumbed down cousins (industrial machines).
In reading the article, I had a thought:
Imagine tiny 3D printers specializing in nothing more than making such tiny batteries, integrated into a bot, then small rails / tracks moving them to where needed, and moving old ones in need of replacement to... Well, it's a kind of excretion. Consume materials to create the batteries, excrete the materials when used up. Imagine if the efficiency was such that the power generated was sufficient enough to sustain the entire bot. That's a bit out there, huh?
What's for lunch today? Battery acid.
I imagine something similar in the world of nano technology, rebuilding parts that make up a whole.
It's an interesting question - how small can a 3D printer be? You could make one with a few small continuous rotation servos (need some kind of position feedback) and some screws and nuts. A smaller version might be electromagnetic, that could be pretty tiny.
Paul