Mason says that he that he believes the team at Nexa3D, "has fundamentally changed what injection molding is. They've opened up access to injection molding for so many new ideas. The cost of participation is so low. Cap-ex is relatively low. The operating costs of the machine are almost insignificant. Material cost, if you’re doing elegant design work, is not that high."
"Now I can get there faster, cheaper and continue to iterate within our model. We can try all the ideas and see which ones develop more organically."
Mason notes that Wilson has been using the Xip Pro to print prototypes. Prototypes are great, he says, but as with molds, a prototype is not really what you want. "What you want is a prototype process that can scale to deliver. Right now, Nexa3D has that process."
Nexa3D has its xMOLD resin, a high-performance dissolvable resin developed for the Freeform Injection Molding process. Mason sees this technology as a tool "that basically unlocks all of the injection molding options."
To date, he says he has yet to find a process that is faster and less expensive than injection molding. "So my focus is how do I use 3D printing to accelerate injection molding. We're already very good at low-volume injection molding, what I call digital injection molding, basically making one part. This enabling us to do that on a much, much larger scale and at a way lower cost."
"Because we can iterate so much quicker, print tools faster than we can machine, and eliminate a couple of the steps in the process, our R&D team can afford to be wrong," Mason said. "This helps us to greatly improve our time-to-market, allowing us to be quick and nimble with our design decision-making process."