3D Printed Control and Actuation for Distributed Manufacturing and Self-Replication

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Abstract

We report on the first open-source FDM 3D printer capable of fabricating its complete electromechanical ecosystem—motors, solenoids, memory systems, and control elements—representing a fundamental advance toward true mechanical self-replication. While previous self-replicating printers produced only structural components, our platform manufactures functional electronics comparable to commercial counterparts: solenoid actuators matching conventional benchmarks (108 ± 5 μJ vs. 99 ± 1.5 μJ), a three-pole brushed DC motor with performance paralleling commercial units, and dual memory architectures: functional mechanical (1639 bits/g) and developmental magnetic systems with theoretical density (5468 bits/g) encoding. The critical innovation lies not in individual components but in their integration within a single fabrication ecosystem, where printed memory directly controls printed actuators without external electronics. Using only standard FDM hardware and accessible materials, we demonstrate that low-cost printers can produce the control, storage, and motion subsystems necessary for autonomous operation. This work establishes that self-sustaining manufacturing—where machines reproduce their own functional components—is achievable with existing additive manufacturing technology, with profound implications for distributed production, space exploration, and resilient supply chains.

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