Industry-leading 3D printing resins, Surgical Guide 3 and IDB 2, have now launched in Canada and Europe, joining the growing SprintRay portfolio of single-appointment workflows of end-to-end 3D printing solutions Surgical Guide 3 resin allows in-office fabrication for 3D printed surgical guides of all kinds, including full-arch multi-site implant guides, bone reduction guides, and more IDB 2 resin enables clinicians …
3D Print Dental Applications Up to 2X Faster with the SprintRay Pro S Arch Kit
Need 3D printed arches ASAP? The all-new Pro S Arch Kit from SprintRay 3D prints a wide variety of appliances up to 2X faster. 3D print models, night guards, denture bases, denture teeth, surgical guides, and hybrid dentures up to twice as fast and in-office. The Fastest Time to 3D Printed Arches The Pro S Arch Kit makes the workflows …
Introducing OnX Tough 2: The First 3D Printing Resin FDA Cleared for Fixed Hybrid Dentures
The need for implant-supported dental prosthetics is on the rise, with the market expected to grow from $10.47 billion in 2022 to $11.54 billion in 2023.1 Unlike conventional removable dentures, fixed hybrid dentures are secured using implants, substantially improving stability, function, and patient satisfaction.2 Traditional processes for fixed, implant-supported dentures involve up to 6 patient visits and extensive fabrication time. …
Ceramic Crown Shades Portfolio Expanded – 3D Print Crowns in Bleach, C2, and D2
The world’s first complete 3D printing ecosystem for definitive ceramic crowns has expanded. Ceramic Crown resin is now available in shades Bleach, C2, and D2 alongside existing shades A1, A2, A3, and B1. This expansion of shades allows dental professionals to match existing anterior and posterior dentition more easily and reduces the time needed for characterization. More shades available broaden the …
Streamlined Denture Design and Fabrication Using a 3D Printing Workflow
Fabricating full dentures with traditional methods can be cumbersome for practitioners and patients. It often requires multiple patient visits for making assessments, impressions, and try-ins, and after these visits, there is still a long wait time for the final clinical dentures. In an article published in Inside Dental Technology, Andrew C. Johnson, DDS, MDS, CDT, and Gregori M. Kurtzman, DDS …