Enhancing FDM Rapid Prototyping for Industry 4.0 Applications Through Simulation and Optimization Techniques

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Abstract

Modern manufacturing is increasingly shaped by the paradigm of Industry 4.0 (Smart Manufacturing). As one of its nine pillars, additive manufacturing plays a crucial role, enabling high-quality final products with improved profitability in minimal time. Advances in this field have facilitated the emergence of diverse technologies—such as Fused Deposition Modelling (FDM), Stereolithography (SLA), and Selective Laser Sintering (SLS)—allowing the use of metallic, polymeric, and composite materials. Within this context, Klipper v.0.12, an open-source firmware for 3D printers, addresses the performance limitations of conventional consumer-grade systems. By offloading computationally intensive tasks to an external single-board computer (e.g., Raspberry Pi), Klipper enhances speed, precision, and flexibility while reducing prototyping time. The purpose of this study is twofold: first, to identify and analyze bottlenecks in low-cost 3D printers and second, to evaluate how these shortcomings can be mitigated through the integration of supplementary hardware and software (Klipper firmware, Raspberry Pi, additional sensors, and the Mainsail interface). The scientific contribution of this study lies in demonstrating that a consumer-grade FDM 3D printer can be significantly upgraded through this integration and systematic calibration, achieving up to a 50% reduction in printing time while maintaining dimensional accuracy and improving surface quality.

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