Factory-Scale Metal Printing

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Divergent expands production with Monolith One and a new factory

Factory-scale metal printing is accelerating the shift from prototype-focused additive manufacturing to high-volume production for aerospace, defense, and automotive applications. Divergent Technologies' new Monolith One industrial metal 3D printer is designed for continuous, large-scale manufacturing and is being deployed across the company's expanded Long Beach factory to significantly increase production capacity. By combining proprietary hardware with its software-defined manufacturing platform, the company can produce complex metal structures more quickly while maintaining consistent quality across multiple alloys.

For manufacturers, this signals a move toward vertically integrated production systems that reduce dependence on traditional supply chains and shorten delivery timelines for critical components. Higher throughput, digital process control, and flexible material compatibility make additive manufacturing increasingly practical for large-scale industrial use. As demand grows for resilient domestic manufacturing, factory-scale metal printing platforms could help companies improve production efficiency, respond faster to customer needs, and strengthen supply chain resilience across strategic industries.

Trend Themes

  1. Factory-scale Additive Manufacturing — Continuous metal printing platforms create room for high-volume production models that move additive manufacturing beyond prototyping and into mission-critical component supply.
  2. Software-defined Production — Digital process control and integrated manufacturing software enable more flexible factory systems where complex metal parts can be produced with consistent quality across materials and designs.
  3. Resilient Domestic Manufacturing — Localized metal printing capacity strengthens industrial supply networks by reducing dependence on long-lead suppliers and improving responsiveness for strategic component demand.

Industry Implications

  1. Aerospace Manufacturing — Lightweight, complex metal structures produced at scale support new aircraft and spacecraft designs with shorter development cycles and more adaptable production economics.
  2. Defense Manufacturing — Secure domestic production of critical metal components offers defense suppliers a path toward faster replenishment, customized part geometries, and reduced exposure to fragile supply chains.
  3. Automotive Production — High-throughput additive systems make advanced vehicle structures more practical by combining part consolidation, rapid design iteration, and scalable metal fabrication in one production environment.

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