General 3D printing misinformation: review of facts and fiction!
Each technology has some fundamental limitations, and 3D printing is no exception.
As soon as I owned and wrote about 3D printers, people started "spamming" me with mainstream articles about it (no pun: still I like them and still I learn from them!). So even our grandparents would soon be printing their glasses, their bikes, their firearms, their houses and even their own legs!
For sure, I am not the one that will disenchant this emerging technology: I am writing this blog and I regularly post new
designs on Thingiverse repository.
But as I write this (april 2013),
you just cannot buy a 3D printer and print anything, nor even expect it to work as advertised if you do not understand very clearly how the thing works. It is just not reliable enough for the average user (unless you have no special expectation, in which case
this pay doh printer may avoid frustrating experiences). It is even quite hard to reach an acceptable quality even for people born with a screwdriver in their hand.
Update 2021 : we're closer to reliable, out-of-the-box 3D printers. Still they often need to be properly tuned, especially the low-cost ones. And time will not fix their other drawbacks. Please read on!