INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Situated on a (usually) busy London street, a smallprint-and-copy shop is 3D printing face masks for health workers at its local
hospital.It isn''t alone.3D printers are being pressed into use to churn out equipment for medical staff worldwide, and while it a drop in
the ocean in terms of meeting demand, it remarkable how the technology is rising to the challenge.Can 3D printing support health
emergency?
3D printing hasn''t become as mainstream a process as people had hoped.This may be because of the cost of the equipment, the time
the process takes, the expense of raw materials or even the current limitations of the technology.To read this article in full, please click