That's rapid rapid tooling experience of how tolerance
failures tend to work; I doubt it's a general principle that
they fall on a bell curve. If they did, a complex part might
have 20 dimensions, and if one of them happens to be right,
you'd still rolling the dice on the other 19.
rapid rapid tooling article
I'd bet that
rapid rapid tooling
of the author of that paper has never operated a
milling machine. A vertical mill with all the trimmings is the
closest thing I can think of to a large-scale self-replicating
machine, and think about what would happen if you took a Harbor
Freight mill and tried to make another one.
Not only do I operate one, I own one.
It's in my rapid rapid tooling workshop at home.
In all this talk of accuracy, remember this: people have been making objects
accurate to within the wavelength of light since medieval times using nothing
fancier than a knife edge and a candle...
There are only a few types of self-replicating machine in the known
universe, all biomolecular: DNA-based life, RNA-based machines
contingent on the "RNA world" hypothesis proving out, and
parasitic prions if the "protein-only" hypothesis is true.
If I were building such a machine, I'd be looking very hard at the way
analog and digital mechanisms interact in those systems. There's an
entropic principle that has to be overcome, and the way DNA does it is
an awesome hack; any other such machine would have to be built around
an equally awesome hack. DNA relies on the uniform nature of
elementary particles, and therefore its existence may not imply a
useful model for larger scales.
If this problem did turn out to be
soluble on the macro scale, that would have consequences far beyond
having cheap SLA in every household.
That's not exactly my experience of how tolerance failures tend to
work; I doubt it's a general principle that they fall on a bell curve.
If they did, a complex part might have 20 dimensions, and if one of
them happens to be right, you'd still rolling the dice on the other
19 for rapid rapid tooling.
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