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points well taken (if "disingenuous" seems a little harsh...)

 

Hello Nick,


I agree that we are likely pretty far from being able to manufacture watch parts or entire assemblies with 3d printing technology as this juncture, but I also think the day will absolutely come.  Perhaps a hybrid of LIGA and laser sintering 3d printing or something of that sort?  I'm taking wild guesses at things I know little about in case that's not obvious.

It's hard to imagine a future for watchmaking though that does not involve downloading a file and manufacturing a part on-site however, perhaps only for exotic restoration work where original replacement parts are not available.  Beating the economy of scale will doubtless be a key driver for this kind of technology.  Custom printed circuit boards to replace obsolete parts in vintage quartz watches, maybe with "comb on a chip" timekeeping to replace a failed quartz crystal?

I'm already veering far left of field from the original question, but I don't think we can easily dismiss the onrush of technological development as far as it will impact fine watchmaking (silicium is very much here already). And just because we can't "grow" a piece with the right combination of metals, critically hardened or otherwise internally crystalline modified to a nano-scale degree of accuracy today, I have no reason to doubt that we will be able to at some point. 

When that happens, maybe we'll have to rely on some kind of sophisticated cryptography and DRM equipped files to license component fabrication in a controlled fashion.  And I can't imagine what kind of techniques will be required to spot the fakes.  [shudders]

_john   

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