Argentine 3D printer manufacturers Trimaker will be trying their luck in Europe as fortunes turn south in their native land. LATAM.tech spoke to CEO Fernando Fernandez on their newest iteration Cosmos II and their hopes to expand across the globe.
The world isn’t flat. 3D printer manufacturers Trimaker are certain of this, taking their business from being one of the first on the continent to now shifting their operations across the globe. Set up originally in Buenos Aires, CEO Fernando Fernandez told LATAM.tech that their intention is now to effect an “aggressive expansion” beyond Latin America.
So they evolved, moving from DLP technology to FDM technology. And after five iterations, Trimaker are now sure they’re now on track to compete in bigger ecosystems with Cosmos II; a machine that now allows the user to print larger objects and get the final results exactly as they had specified.
In addition to prosthetic parts, 3D printing can also effectively print surgical tools when rapid sterilisation of tools isn’t an option. Using plastic material with a silver coating of antibacterial nanoparticles, the tools can be used to perform life-saving medical procedures without a risk of infection, according to the company’s blog.
The company will now be exploring as much of 3D printing’s potential from their new home in Spain. As a result of the downturn in Argentina’s economic and political fortunes–including currency devaluation and the lack of clarity around taxation and regulation–many companies in Argentina are now realising that fairer shores won’t just be voluntary but obligatory. “The politics changes here every 10 years,” Fernandez said of the volatile political climate for young entrepreneurs in the country.
Trimaker will now have that behind them. The world is grand and has depth and they’re set about to show that to be true.