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How 3D Printing Can Boost Your Model Crane Collection

How 3D Printing Can Boost Your Model Crane Collection

Posted by Weiss Bros on 13th Oct 2017

When it comes to your model crane collection, there are very few things that you will want to overlook.  Scale die cast models can look so real it is amazing.  With the help of computer software, scale modeling is easier than ever before.  If you need to have a custom hook, rigging or even a concrete dump bucket created for your new crane setup, there is one other technological advancement that might be here to help you.

Enter 3D Printers

There are so many ways that technology has changed the ways that we do things in our everyday lives.  The 3D printer is one concept that is doing just that.  Printing small figurines or even HOUSES, a 3D printer is quickly becoming a new gadget that you can fit into your garage in most cases.  How will a 3D printer help with your crane collection?  Let's get into that now.

Accessories Are Small And Easy

Most 3D printers have a small capacity for printing items and that makes them perfect if you want to whip together a concrete bucket, for instance.  You have always wanted to have one and might even have a custom design for one that you came up with on your own.  Now you can send a design off to a person with a 3D printer and in a few short days or weeks, you will be the exclusive owner of a brand new, never before designed, model crane accessory.

Stand Out From The Crowd

Of course, you can just go to any die cast model website and pick up the same old accessory that everyone else is buying.  That is the easy way and might even be more affordable.  The downside is that your new crane setup is going to look like everyone else's on the block.  Get that custom concrete bucket, rigging spreader bars, shackles and  crane mats that you have always had in mind and YOUR crane setup is going to stand out from the rest.

It's Plastic, Not Metal at All

Just remember, in most cases, when dealing with a 3D printer, you are not dealing with a metal product.  3D printers make items out of different types of plastic, so take that into consideration before drawing up planes for your replacement boom that got wrecked when you moved to a new city.

In the meantime, leave a comment below or visit our Facebook page and let us know what you think about 3D printing and the die cast model crane world.  If you have not yet, please make sure to sign up for the newsletter with the form below.

*photo credit eef 7260