Cerberus comes with its own self-levelling system to compensate for uneven terrain
he ability to deliver engineered solutions for real world moulds and tooling has resulted in Rapid Fusion seeing demand
for its large format additive manufacturing solutions increase again, with domestic and international sales secured for the Apollo, Zeus and Medusa products. This string of orders has taken revenues
past the £2m mark for the first time in the company’s three-year history and lays the foundation for it to accelerate the roll-out of its latest solution: Cerberus. Debuted at Formnext in November last year, the latest innovation brings purpose-built containerised manufacturing to the fore, with every millimetre designed for rapid deployment, rugged operation, and uncompromising performance. It is intended for use in isolated areas, from
arctic oil platforms and desert forward bases to disaster zones and remote construction sites.
There has been a lot of disruptors entering the 3D printing world, promising to print lots of one-off, unrealistic products, that don’t really make commercial sense. We’ve instead looked at how we build our solutions so they are 100% focused on creating usable manufacturing parts that will go into automotive, aerospace and, increasingly, military and life-saving applications. That’s what has really paid off for us and helped us to grow in what has been a very challenging time. Our core robotic systems – all designed, developed and built in the UK – have enjoyed strong sales, and now Cerberus promises to be the gamechanger. With our expansion plans beginning to
materialise this year, we are in an immediate position to create five new engineering, design and software roles, with a further four jobs required by the end of 2026.
Designed to be container-native, the deployable hybrid manufacturing system provides access to a build volume of 1200mm3
with a pellet
throughput of up to 17kg per hour and 3kW of continuous spindle power – ideal for both 3D printing and CNC machining. It thrives on supply chain independence, where
Martin Jewell 42
resupply could be in months and not days. With this in mind, the system offers bulk material compatibility so any local polymers can be used, benefits from dual independent heads to ensure zero downtime, and operates up to 500˚C for advanced composite production.
Getting started couldn’t be easier. A single power 5-pin commando socket is all that is required, with Cerberus coming with its own self-levelling system to compensate for uneven terrain and automated start-up sequence for system verification and calibration.
The fact we can deploy such a high-quality hybrid manufacturing system in just 25 minutes is unheard of and we’re currently in negotiations with several organisations keen to be among the first purchasers of this technology.
Parts can be made on our system for rescue
drones, safety critical parts for oil and gas, vital medical equipment in disaster zones and replacement bits for vehicles operating in some of the most demanding terrains in the world. We thought it was going to be popular, but the response at Formnext and what has followed has been phenomenal!
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