Hero Image
avatar

Nexa3D

HEADQUARTER

Ventura, CA, USA

FOUNDED

2016

COMPANY SIZE

51-200

INDUSTRY

Additive Manufacturing
https://nexa3d.com/

What we do

Nexa3D is a 3D printer manufacturer enabling ultrafast and scaled additive production, offering supercharged throughput, validated workflows, and an open material platform. Our proprietary Lubricant Sublayer Photocuring (LSPc) 3D printing technology unlocks productivity gains by as much as 20 times greater than those of other 3D printing processes. We offer a wide range of polymer solutions, spanning from desktop resin 3D printing to industrial additive manufacturing systems.

Latest Posts

When used with high-temperature engineering resins, industrial-grade 3D printers can help automotive companies develop parts and prototypes with short product development cycles.

How high-temp AM resins are accelerating automotive production

Nexa3D's LSPc technology uses UV light and advanced membrane technology with 4K LCD image masking to rapidly convert photopolymer resin into structural plastic, enabling fast product iteration and immediate transition to production.

Ultrafast 3D Printing: A Design Guide for Lubricant Sublayer Photo-curing (LSPc) Printing

PepsiCo worked with Nexa3D’s partner Dynamism to validate the NXE 400 and the xPEEK147 material as ideal for their blow molding application requiring speed and durability.

CAD to Part in 48 Hours: PepsiCo Slashes Tooling Costs and Cycle Times with the help of NXE 400

Working with engineering experts at MotoCilino, the team commercialized a handheld flight controller in record time

Revolutionizing Flight Simulation 3D Printing

Research institute adopts Freeform Injection Molding to provide rapid prototyping of complex metal parts

Fraunhofer Speeds Up Metal Injection Molding with 3D-Printed Tooling

Reducing the carbon footprint of 3D printing requires work from 3D printer manufacturers and end-users. Nexa3D’s resin printers are built using recyclable materials and allow users to print responsibly too.

Reducing the carbon footprint of additive manufacturing