1988
The technology used by most 3D printers to dateóespecially hobbyist and
consumer-oriented modelsóis fused deposition modeling, a special
application of plastic extrusion, developed in 1988 by S. Scott Crump
and commercialized by his company Stratasys, which marketed its first
FDM machine in 1992.
AM processes for metal sintering or melting (such as selective laser
sintering, direct metal laser sintering, and selective laser melting)
usually went by their own individual names in the 1980s and 1990s. At
the time, all metalworking was done by processes that we now call
non-additive (casting, fabrication, stamping, and machining); although
plenty of automation was applied to those technologies (such as by robot
welding and CNC), the idea of a tool or head moving through a 3D work
envelope transforming a mass of raw material into a desired shape with a
toolpath was associated in metalworking only with processes that removed
metal (rather than adding it), such as CNC milling, CNC EDM, and many
others. But the automated techniques that added metal, which would later
be called additive manufacturing, were beginning to challenge that
assumption. By the mid-1990s, new techniques for material deposition
were developed at Stanford and Carnegie Mellon University, including
microcasting and sprayed materials. Sacrificial and support materials
had also become more common, enabling new object geometries.