According to a recent LinkedIn post from Formlabs, the company is highlighting an application of its Fuse Series selective laser sintering printers for both prototyping and end-use parts. The post describes how SLS printing can leverage industrial-grade materials and design flexibility to create complex products with fewer traditional manufacturing constraints.
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The post cites Palladion Systems’ development of a print-in-place counter‑UAV system produced as a single build with deployable arms integrated into the design. This manufacturing approach on Formlabs’ Fuse Series reportedly reduces assembly steps, accelerates design iteration, and supports more scalable production workflows.
For investors, the example suggests growing adoption of Formlabs’ SLS platform in defense‑adjacent or security applications, which could expand addressable markets and improve recurring hardware and materials revenue. Demonstrated use cases in complex, functional systems may also strengthen Formlabs’ competitive position versus other industrial 3D printing providers focused on low-volume production and rapid iteration.
If such applications scale, Formlabs could benefit from higher utilization rates of installed printers and greater demand for consumables, potentially improving margins over time. The emphasis on end-use production rather than just prototyping also points to a strategic focus on deeper integration into customers’ manufacturing processes, which can increase switching costs and long-term customer retention.

