6 thoughts on “A RepRap business model

  1. Tax would have to be paid by each person. 1 part would be taxed 3 times.

    I agree, I think the bottom has already fallen out on price. With Isaac printing and being sold, Profound Devices getting closer, Makerbot Ramping up production, and the new family of cast parts… Finally those that want RepRap are getting the access they deserve.

    In the end the Lasercut parts for a repstrap are +-250, and that will likely be the floor for RP Mendel pieces.

  2. Not necessarily. You could:
    (1) Have the parts sold on commission, so there’s only one actual transaction.
    (2) Have the parts sold by each maker/seller.
    The other points deserve it’s own post to follow…

  3. It will settle out to about 50 to 100 dollars or so a set. That’s a reasonable and fair price. I’m still not clear why there has to be a business model. This isn’t like piracy or Fortune 500 business, this is a legitimate honest enterprise. Once the Makerbot monopoly is broken on the market place, things will get a lot better, a lot quicker than people can imagine.

  4. (1) An open source monopoly is an oxymoron at best. There is no such thing.
    (2) No one says there “has to be” a business around 3d printing, but this is a suggestion for how one might structure such an enterprise.
    (3) I’m totally lost as to why a business model is set in a dichotomy against “honest enterprise.” Business models are for more than just piracy and Fortune 500 companies. Any business of any size, even down to a lemonade stand, requires some kind of planning.
    (4) $50-100 a printed set would barely cover the plastic, wear/tear, and shipping on supplies! And, at that price I can’t imagine anyone would want to print parts. Even at $100 you’re talking about at least $30 in plastic, at least $5 to get the plastic shipped to you, 24 print jobs of 2-3 hours each, and at least 6 hours of human intervention if everything is going perfectly. During that time there will be a snag in plastic, an extruder clog/ooze, maintenance, and just random failures. You could easily burn through some other parts at the same time – idler wheel, insulating retainer ring, etc.

  5. Pingback: Have we reached the bottom already? | MakerBlock

  6. I’m in!

    I have had a makerbot for almost a year and a half, i got one from the second shipment. I’m 24 and getting out of the army in about 8 months. I am starting a security business in the DC area next year and this will be my second business.

    Email me, I’m totally in.

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