Комментарии:
😎❤️
ОтветитьAny reason no Volcanic ash (roman era tech) not used?
ОтветитьThanks for stopping by and sharing our story Jarrett! Always a pleasure!
ОтветитьPodcast with CEO Ian coming soon on this channel!
ОтветитьAwesome!! Not sure why people go with COBOD though, sloppiest prints come from their machines.
ОтветитьThis is progress!
ОтветитьYaaaaaaaaasss
Ответить🤗👍😎 JARETT…WE SEE 👀 AND WE LOVE 💚 the progress….slow but steady 😁
And HAPPY WE HAVE BEEN WATCHING THE WHOLE TIME 👏👏👏💚💚💚
Love it Jarett and thank you Nidus and COBOD
ОтветитьIm thinking attend your course. Also invest in this tech.
ОтветитьA two story print, more proof that we are limited only by our imaginations. Thanks to all involved in this production. Eye opening, to put it mildly. One step closer to printing the Empire State Building, one floor at a time. I just love the innovation you are documenting in this dynamic field Jarett Gross. Thanks for this important information you are sharing. Blessings back to you and your family and crew.
ОтветитьThese guys using the spatula are way ahead of the game. Those smooth layer lines are key. If the layer lines look smooth enough, it just looks similar to brick, which is acceptable as an exterior veneer.
ОтветитьAmazing amazing amazing!!! You need a "smoothing team" that can smooth out the facade as it continues...
ОтветитьWilliam Urschel would be very disappointed
ОтветитьLoved the insight provided by these guys. If the boss wanted, he could always get a job public speaking. Excellent work.
ОтветитьLove that they aren't afraid to just use a concrete truck for the next one! Simple solution - get the experts to do the mix for you!
Ответить💯
Ответить45Pa he said?
Ответитьeconomical house.... good
ОтветитьKindly connect to the Firm CEO for i need a training attachment
ОтветитьVery interesting, how to contact the contractor, can you provide an E. Mail address please.
ОтветитьHi, my name is Wilson patino from UK
Exelent job
You're a brave man for trying to sell that in Canada. I honestly can't imagine that competing with ICF. And ICF seems to me to be way more versatile. And probably better insulated. And stronger. I wonder how the costs compare.
ОтветитьImpressed by the technical knowledge and practical problem solving skills of Nidus. They seem grounded in engineering first and foremost, while in my opinion other 3D printing dual facade startups, especially the well funded ones, are primarily marketing organizations crafted for their investor's ROI plan and will fail as Katerra and GlideHomes and countless similar firms did eventually. Having started in computer and software development in 1977 I am lucky to be self funded and meet SEC requirements as an angel and series "A" investor. Not any smarter, but have the luxury to learn from design and process mistakes and move forward without putting other people's money at risk.
I can appreciate Nidus' efforts, having worked in semi-retirement off/on for 4 years trying to design an affordable prefab modular residential kit home, based on stick-built construction methods which, ignoring the marketing hype, is what prefab modular is really. Even with a huge $3B VC investment in automation Katerra could not make stick-based prefab modular profitable, and neither were any of my (25+) panalized design iterations. Too much manufacturing, transport and assembly time. To focus on materials cost shows you do not understand the full scope of the residential construction problem.
My new non-stick-built approach is more promising and has survived structural and construction time reviews. I encourage anyone serious about furthering residential construction technology to put the FEA structural analysis tools developed by SkyCiv (wonderful Australian firm) to use. It has saved me countless times by pointing out where my design is screwed up structurally and correct it before too much time is wasted. I have no financial association with SkyCiv.
Best of luck to Nidus.
Do a test run with a hemp and lime compound and see how well it works…. Hemp is an extremely renewable resource because you can get a crop harvest around 7 months.
ОтветитьWe have a project in Austin, TX here in the states where the designer wants 3D printed concrete.
ОтветитьDo you know the pour insulation they used?
ОтветитьWhat happened to Nidus3D? their website is no longer working...
ОтветитьHow long do these houses last and how much do they cost?
ОтветитьHas anyone experimented with making the nozzle vibrate?
ОтветитьI like the curved layers. Don't smooth them
Ответить