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Back in Feburary, I was one of the first people to throw some cash at the Voltera V-One circuit board printer on Kickstarter. With an anticipated delivery date of Q4 2015, I sat back and waited ...
Voltera lets you do this by allowing you to print your own PCB at the speed of, say, a desktop 3D printer, or even faster. Like a regular printer, Voltera uses ink, but the kind that can conduct ...
The printer is essentially a PCB maker. You put in a board, upload a circuit diagram, and the system draws it in conductive ink. You can then solder in the proper components.
Voltera’s printer aims to do for circuit boards and prototyping what MakerBot did for the Maker movement with its low-end 3-D printer.
Voltera is a rapidly scaling and profitable Canadian tech company that is driving substantial change in the additive electronics industry. Its inaugural product, the V-One desktop PCB printer, ...
The company will be assembling the printers in North America and they are currently working with potential customers to assess exactly what they need in home PCB printing.
The Voltera V-One 3D printer, which dispenses conducting and insulating ink to create circuit-completed boards for prototyping, garnered nearly five times its $70,000 crowdsourcing goal.
Company Voltera claims its V-One printer can create a prototype FR4 board on the desktop from the Gerber files. The printer lays down a conductive ink to create the traces and an insulating ink as a ...
Four engineering students from the University of Waterloo, Canada, have won an international James Dyson award. Their invention, the Voltera V-One, is a laptop-sized PCB printer that can turn design ...
Probably everyone has dreamed of a 3D printer-like machine that would just crank out beautiful PCBs. The Voltera V-One isn’t quite at that level of sophistication, but it isn’t too far from it.
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