Espen Øino holds a 3D-printed model of a yacht up to his laptop camera. “We use 3D printing for quickly printing out models to evaluate,” explains the celebrated naval architect “The more you look at a virtual model on a screen the more you feel the need to physically touch it and feel how the hull shape is.”
Øino states that 3D printing “is going to revolutionize boatbuilding.” Circuitry could be printed inside a hull without cable trays. Local geometries and structural arrangements will not be based upon accessibility for a welder or engineer to do their job. “It's really promising because once we have different printing heads with different materials you can optimize structures.” The timescale? “Don't get too excited,” Øino warns. Printing entire supeiyachts is going to take a few years.
Last December the excitement was palpable as one of Scandinavia's best-selling motorboat models powered along Sweden's blustery west coast. But this version of the 14ft Pioner 14 Active was different. It had been printed in just three days, entirely in one piece. No molds, no tools and minimal labor required. The build wasted just four percent of raw material. The boat could have been printed in sky blue or shocking pink. The style-conscious Swedes