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Tube Expo 2026 believes that while new technologies cannot replace steel punching and molds, they can save time and costs in prototype production, training, and short-cycle forming.
For a long time, pressing tools have been carved from tool steel. Some are traditional planer-style tools, while others are precisely ground to very strict tolerances. Both need to be hardened to withstand daily wear and use.
Although the core of tube manufacturing does not change, the demand for prototype design and small-batch production has shifted towards custom molds—3D printing. Tube Expo 2026 believes that 3D printing will play a more important role in the tube manufacturing industry in the future.
Tube Expo 2026 has learned that today, 3D printers on workshop benches can create a mold prototype for a press tool in just a few hours, at a cost far lower than producing samples individually through traditional methods.
However, it should be clear that 3D-printed tools cannot yet fully replace traditional tube production, but for sample production, small-batch parts, and integrated manufacturing, 3D printing plays a very important role. Some vocational schools even use 3D-printed tube tools in teaching and classroom demonstrations. In the hands of capable and qualified personnel, 3D printers have the potential to develop into precision production tools in the industry.
In the short term, 3D printing will not completely replace steel press tools or the skills of steel tool makers in the tube industry, but it offers a completely new option for the mechanical production sector. For the precision tube and sheet metal industry, this is a technological development worth following.
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