Yachting

A NEW DIMENSION

Boatbuilde­rs are embracing 3D-printing technology in ways that will change yachts forever.

- by kim kavin

Is 3D printing going mainstream for building yachts and yacht parts? The tech is closer to science fact than it is to science fiction.

Llast fall, when the university of maine announced that it had created the world’s largest 3D-printed boat, imaginatio­ns ran wild. The idea of pressing a touchscree­n and having a boat spit out of a gigantic printer suddenly felt possible. The notion of having a boat designed in a newfangled shape became a realistic-sounding option. And because the team in Maine had printed the 25-foot boat in just 72 hours, dreams of having production boats fly off factory lines became the stuff of serious conversati­ons. ¶ Practicall­y speaking, here in reality, things are moving a bit slower on the innovation timeline. Habib Joseph Dagher, who leads the project as director of the university’s Advanced Structures and Composites Center, says the most likely immediate outcome will be a new way to make boat molds in the 50-foot range. “We think some of the first products that will come out over the next year will be full-size or close-to-full-size molds for boats made of recyclable materials,” Dagher says. “We think what’s going to happen next is shipyards evaluating the molds and giving us feedback, so we can get the technology honed in and able to roll out on a commercial scale.” ¶ It’s a baby step in what experts say will be leaps and bounds of creative uses for 3D-printing technology once it can be harnessed to its full potential. Additive manufactur­ing, as it’s also known, is now the stuff of tests and experiment­s in fields as wide-ranging as aerospace and dentistry. Researcher­s are figuring out all kinds of materials that can be 3D-printed, as well as

all kinds of ways to build the 3D printers themselves. The US Army is testing ways to use the machines in fields of combat, to print replacemen­t parts on demand. Carnegie Mellon University just got funding to create software that will identify components in a CAD file that can be optimized and built better, such as in a different shape to reduce weight. BMW recently opened an entire additive-manufactur­ing campus in Germany, looking to improve upon the 300,000 or so parts the company built this way in 2019. ¶ “One day, we’ll all be printing boats without a mold,” Dagher says, “but we’re all going to have to wait a little bit for that.” ¶ As far as boats go, advances are happening all around the world. At the IYRS School of Technology and Trades in Rhode Island, the Digital Modeling and Fabricatio­n Program is heading into its fourth year. Jeff Elsbecker, who heads it up, says that to understand where 3D-printing technology is today, we have to think about printers from the 1980s. ¶ “If you remember dot-matrix printers, I would say that 3D-printing technology is almost where dot-matrix printers were,” Elsbecker says. “We’ll follow that with lasers and jet printing and all kinds of things. I suppose the far end would be replicator­s like in Star Trek.”

¶ IYRS is focusing on teaching students design fundamenta­ls and the basics of the technology. By the time they start working in naval-architectu­re firms or shipyards a few years from now, everything will have changed many times over, but the fundamenta­l skills will still be needed to use whatever form the technology takes. ¶ “There’s so many people doing so many things, one of the issues is also getting the machines to communicat­e with each other,” he says. “It’s sort of like deciding whether to go with beta or VHF. It’s at that stage.” ¶ Boatbuilde­rs who are early adopters in the 3D-printing world are using the technology for things like components and molds, says Bill Kenyon, director of education at IYRS. One example, he

says, is Brooklin Boat Yard in Maine. It’s mostly a traditiona­l boatbuildi­ng and repair facility. ¶ “When I was up there in January, they showed us a bow chock that the guys had designed,” Kenyon says. “They worked it all up in CAD and sent it off to a company that 3D-printed a prototype. They got it back, tweaked their design, sent it a couple of times, and then the guy could print it for them in titanium.” ¶ Similar experiment­ation is happening in Auckland, New Zealand, where Richard Booten, head of design at Yachting Developmen­ts, says the yard’s purchase of 3D printers led to all kinds of ideas. ¶ “Once you’ve got the machines, you start thinking about what you can use them for,” Booten says. “A lot of what we use them for is printing hull components—anything that has a highly complex shape. We’ve done exhaust-tube fittings. We’ve done hull fittings. We’ve achieved all sorts of stuff. Anything we would traditiona­lly have gone and built on a CNC at great expense, we have done that. It’s really saving us some money by doing that.” ¶ Yachting Developmen­ts is also now using the technology to plan vessel refits, to help clients understand how a final component will look and feel. ¶ “The boat in the shed at the moment that we’re doing a refit to, they’re putting a new screen on the helm console,” Booten says. “Before we committed to making something out of carbon or fiberglass, we are able to print that addition and melt the screen in it so the captain can see what he’s actually going to get in real life. I think we’ve printed two or three of them now, and he’s changed stuff along the way. It’s relatively inexpensiv­e to do that. Before, you’d kind of do it on the computer screen, and everybody would peer at it. The real-life version can look a bit different, so this is a real advantage.” ¶ What will come next for the technology in boatbuildi­ng, he says, is anybody’s guess. Right now, 3D-printing materials don’t compare to fiberglass or carbon in terms of strength for building hulls, but new materials are being developed all the time. Most boatbuilde­rs can’t afford a mammoth-scale 3D printer of their own, so they’re limited by whatever additive-manufactur­ing company can do the printing off-site. Boatbuilde­rs, like everyone else, are just trying to keep up with the technology and think toward the future. ¶ “There’s people around the world playing with all sorts of stuff with regard to 3D printing,” Booten says. “There’s people printing houses. There’s people printing bridges with welders stuck on the end of robots. It’s only going to gain more traction as a process and in the industry over the coming years.”

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 ??  ?? Yachting Developmen­ts in Auckland, New Zealand, used 3D printing to create the tooling for Youth America’s Cup boats it’s building for the 2021 race.
Yachting Developmen­ts in Auckland, New Zealand, used 3D printing to create the tooling for Youth America’s Cup boats it’s building for the 2021 race.
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