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3D Printing & Additive — 2026-04-21

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3D Printing & Additive — 2026-04-21

3D Printing & Additive|April 21, 2026(5h ago)3 min read8.9AI quality score — automatically evaluated based on accuracy, depth, and source quality
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RAPID + TCT 2026 concluded in Boston this week, delivering a wave of new hardware, materials, and market moves across the additive manufacturing space. Bambu Lab quietly retired its X1 Series FFF printers, signaling a generational shift in consumer desktop 3D printing. Meanwhile, a peer-reviewed study introduced a sustainable natural rubber elastomer 3D printing process, and Anycubic made a strong showing at the show with next-generation multicolor and large-format resin systems.

3D Printing & Additive — 2026-04-21


Key Highlights


RAPID + TCT 2026: New Machines & Market Moves

The floor of RAPID + TCT 2026 in Boston proved there is no shortage of momentum in additive manufacturing, with major hardware debuts and strategic announcements across the board. All3DP's coverage identified seven game-changing 3D printers at the show, noting a clear industry-wide shift in emphasis — from raw print speed to material mastery as the defining competitive frontier for the next year.

Crowded show floor at RAPID + TCT 2026 in Boston
Crowded show floor at RAPID + TCT 2026 in Boston

HP's new entry-level industrial offering and Anycubic's surprise reveals were among the highlights called out specifically by All3DP's on-the-ground reporters.

A separate roundup from 3DPrint.com also confirmed significant hardware and market activity on the show floor, including new machines positioned for production-scale environments.

all3dp.com

all3dp.com

i.all3dp.com

i.all3dp.com


Anycubic's Next-Gen Lineup at RAPID + TCT

Anycubic formally showcased its next-generation 3D printing lineup at RAPID + TCT 2026, with a focus on multicolor FDM and large-format resin innovation. Live demonstrations and finished print samples were a central draw at the Anycubic booth. The company's recent FDM and resin releases had already earned coverage from CNET, TechRadar, and Tom's Hardware prior to the show.

Anycubic next-generation 3D printing display at RAPID+TCT 2026
Anycubic next-generation 3D printing display at RAPID+TCT 2026


Bambu Lab Retires X1 Series; Education Grant News

In the April 18 news briefs from 3DPrint.com, two notable items surfaced:

  • Bambu Lab has retired its X1 Series of FFF 3D printers — a significant move that closes out the product line that helped redefine expectations for desktop speed and automation.
  • SPE announced a collaboration to expand 3D printing education through its equipment grant program, broadening access to additive manufacturing tools in academic settings.

3D printing news April 18 briefing
3D printing news April 18 briefing

3dprint.com

3dprint.com

3dprint.com

3dprint.com


Sustainable Natural Rubber Elastomer 3D Printing

A new study published in Scientific Reports (1 day ago) presents a sustainable novel 3D printing process for elastomeric products using natural rubber. The research addresses long-standing limitations of the traditional dipping process used in mass production of items like latex gloves and tyres, proposing an additive manufacturing approach that could reduce material waste inherent in bulk processing methods.


Analysis

The most exciting development this week is the industry-level pivot confirmed at RAPID + TCT 2026: additive manufacturing is moving from a speed competition to a materials competition.

All3DP's reporting from the Boston show floor captured it succinctly — the machines that generated the most excitement weren't necessarily the fastest, but those with the most sophisticated material handling and multi-material capabilities. Anycubic's multicolor FDM and large-format resin showcase, HP's new entry-level industrial offering, and the broader range of polymer and metal systems on display all pointed in the same direction: the next competitive battleground is what you can print with, not just how fast you can print it.

This tracks with Bambu Lab's strategic decision to retire the X1 Series. The X1 was the machine that ignited the speed arms race in consumer/prosumer FDM. Retiring it now signals that even Bambu sees the product cycle moving to new dimensions — likely multi-material, next-generation automation, and broader material compatibility.

For industrial buyers, this shift means the purchasing calculus is changing. Throughput benchmarks matter less than process validation for advanced polymers, composites, and metals. Suppliers that can demonstrate qualified, repeatable results with demanding materials will have the strongest hand in 2026 and beyond.


What to Watch

  • RAPID + TCT 2026 aftermath: Expect detailed product announcements, pricing, and availability windows to emerge over the next two to four weeks as companies formalize the launches previewed on the Boston show floor.

  • Bambu Lab's next move: With the X1 Series retired, the industry is watching for what Bambu will introduce to fill that slot and how it will differentiate from its current lineup.

  • Natural rubber 3D printing commercialization: The Scientific Reports study on elastomeric AM is early-stage research, but the applications in medical gloves, seals, and consumer goods are substantial. Watch for follow-on industrial interest.

  • IMTS 2026 (September 14–19, Chicago): The International Manufacturing Technology Show will feature hands-on additive manufacturing demonstrations. Registration for AM workshops is open.

This content was collected, curated, and summarized entirely by AI — including how and what to gather. It may contain inaccuracies. Crew does not guarantee the accuracy of any information presented here. Always verify facts on your own before acting on them. Crew assumes no legal liability for any consequences arising from reliance on this content.

Explore related topics
  • QWhich machines offer the best material versatility?
  • QWhat replaces the Bambu Lab X1 series?
  • QHow does 3D-printed rubber impact production costs?
  • QWhat are the new HP printer specifications?

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