AMPOWER and TAAG combine data and production to scale 3D printing

Published on June 25, 2026 | Translated from Spanish

AMPOWER and TAAG companies have formed an alliance to connect 3D printing market information with industrial manufacturing. The initiative offers manufacturers and investors market data and technical support to scale production. The goal is for companies to invest with greater precision and avoid common mistakes. For citizens, this could translate into products like spare parts or medical devices manufactured more efficiently and cheaply, making the technology more accessible.

industrial data center merging with additive manufacturing production line, holographic market graphs floating above 3D printers, robotic arm placing a finished medical implant onto a conveyor belt, glowing blue data streams connecting server racks to printing nozzles, engineers monitoring digital twins on transparent touchscreens, photorealistic engineering visualization, cool steel and neon cyan lighting, hyperdetailed nozzle depositing titanium alloy layer by layer, cross-section of a printer showing real-time temperature gradients, cinematic depth of field, clean futuristic factory aesthetic

Market data applied to industrial development πŸ“Š

The collaboration aims to bridge the gap between market data and its practical application in production. AMPOWER contributes its expertise in trend analysis and additive manufacturing costs, while TAAG offers its experience in scaling industrial processes. Together, they will provide manufacturers with information on materials, technologies, and production volumes. This allows identifying real business opportunities and properly sizing equipment investments. The alliance will also facilitate technical validation of projects, helping companies move from prototypes to series without incurring cost overruns.

The treasure map to avoid buying a printer you won't use πŸ—ΊοΈ

Because we all know that company that bought an industrial 3D printer thinking it would churn out parts like hotcakes, and now uses it to make promotional keychains. This alliance promises that investors will stop guessing with their eyes closed and have real data before signing the check. So maybe someday, when you order a spare part for your coffee maker, it won't cost more than a new coffee maker. Or so we hope, because faith in 3D printing sometimes resembles faith in a diet: it starts with enthusiasm and ends on the couch.