A microscope that cost less than £50 and took under 3 hours to build using a common 3D printer could be transformative for ...
For the first time, labs around the world can 3D print their own precision microscopes to analyse samples and detect diseases , thanks to an open-source design created at the University of Bath. The ...
Since the invention of 3D printers, people have come up with ingenious ways to use them to make cheaper versions of expensive objects. In the latest such innovation, scientists at the University of ...
The University of Bath has designed an open-source medical-grade microscope that can be made for as little as £15 in its most basic form Called OpenFlexure microscope, “it is unique among 3D-printed ...
In context: 3D printing is slowly becoming mainstream, having moved beyond functional prototyping, rapid tooling, trinkets, and toys. We have already seen people use 3D printers to create fashion ...
You can download the recipe for the OpenFlexure microscope from GitHub, feed it into a 3D printer and, combined with a little camera and computer, you have a way to ...
From left to right, Joe Knapper, an engineer from Glasgow University, Dr. Elisee from CHUB hospital in Butare, Rwanda, and Dr. Daniel Rosen from Baylor College of Medicine setting up the OpenFlexure ...