Acquisitions, Mergers & PartnershipsAerospace AMAM Industry

DMG MORI joins Morf3D’s Applied Digital Manufacturing Center

Stay up to date with everything that is happening in the wonderful world of AM via our LinkedIn community.

DMG MORI, a worldwide leader in metal cutting machine tools and hybrid metal AM systems, has committed to a technology development partnership in Morf3D’s new Applied Digital Manufacturing Center (ADMC) in Long Beach, California.

DMG MORI has committed to a technology development partnership in Morf3D Applied Digital Manufacturing Center (ADMC) in Long Beach, California
DMG MORI Joins the Applied Digital Manufacturing Center as its Newest Industry Partner

The future of aerospace manufacturing is digital. Morf3D is the industry innovator bringing together the best technologies, methodologies, and minds to make this new era of digital manufacturing possible. The leading edge of this progress is the ADMC (Applied Digital Manufacturing Center), a partnership of global leaders utilizing a 90,000 square foot, state-of-the-art facility to industrialize the digital manufacturing process across all markets.

DMG MORI is partnering with the ADMC, as a supplier of subtractive, adaptive, automation and hybrid 3D AM technologies, that will be imperative as the ADMC continues to evolve. DMG MORI is providing post-3D manufacturing solutions and utilizing their automation technology to provide complete solutions. DMG MORI General Manager of National Engineering, Mr. Jeff Wallace is the DMG MORI representative and supplies technical insight and experience in the above areas as projects are reviewed and implemented.

“We are privileged to partner with DMG MORI who will deliver immense innovation and integrated capability,” said Ivan Madera, CEO for Morf3D, Inc. “Their incredible contributions – including their best-of-the-best equipment and brightest minds in the industry – will be an excellent addition to the Applied Digital Manufacturing Center and will further evolve our mission to streamline and automate the production process.”

“We are honored to take part in the Applied Digital Manufacturing Center,” said Dr. Keiichi Ota, President at DMG MORI USA, Inc.. “Morf3D is making such incredible strides in the additive manufacturing industry, and we are excited to work together as partners to keep that momentum going.”

The Center will house 150 multi-discipline engineers, research staff, and technical teams. The ADMC will also serve as a strong industrial base that will improve the quality of Morf3D’s products and enhance the company’s technical capabilities, as well as enrich its customer applications worldwide.

Research
Polymer AM Market Opportunities and Trends

741 unique polymer AM companies individually surveyed and studied. Core polymer AM market generated $4.6 billion in 2021. Market expected to grow to over $34 billion by 2030 at 24.8% CAGR. This new...

VoxelMatters

3D Printing Media Network is the online trade media portal published by 3dpbm, a leading marketing and market research firm specializing in the AM industry. 3dpbm also publishes the 3D Printing Business Directory, the AM Focus eBook series and the 3dpbm Research AM Market Reports. 3D Printing Media Network was founded with the goal to provide the latest industry news, insights and opinions to a global audience of professionals and decision makers.

Related Articles

Back to top button

We use cookies to give you the best online experience and for ads personalisation. By agreeing you accept the use of cookies in accordance with our cookie policy.

Privacy Settings saved!
Privacy Settings

When you visit any web site, it may store or retrieve information on your browser, mostly in the form of cookies. Control your personal Cookie Services here.

These cookies are necessary for the website to function and cannot be switched off in our systems.

In order to use this website we use the following technically required cookies
  • PHPSESSID
  • wordpress_test_cookie
  • wordpress_logged_in_
  • wordpress_sec

Decline all Services
Accept all Services