Frequently Asked Questions

Find quick answers to the most common questions about our materials, lead times, and ordering process.

What materials are available?

We print with industrial-grade materials including PLA, PETG, ABS, ASA, TPU, and PA12 — covering everything from simple prototypes to functional, high-strength components.

How do I get a quote?

Shoot us a message at [email protected] or use the contact form below. Attach your STL, STEP, or OBJ files and we’ll get back to you with pricing and lead time within 24 hours.

Do you offer bulk or production discounts?

Yes, we provide scaled pricing for batch runs, recurring orders, and long-term clients. Just mention your quantity when requesting a quote.

Where do you ship from?

All parts are produced and shipped directly from Schleswig, Germany. We deliver across the World with reliable, tracked shipping.

What’s your typical turnaround time?

Most orders are completed and shipped within 1–3 business days, depending on size and complexity. Larger production runs are scheduled individually.

Can I request custom materials or colors?

Absolutely, if you need a specific filament or color, we can order it in for your project. Just let us know in your quote request.

What tolerances can I expect?

Our FDM prints maintain ±0.2 mm dimensional accuracy, depending on part geometry and material. If you need tighter tolerances, just include that note in your quote request.

Do you offer resin or CNC machining?

Not yet, we currently focus entirely on FDM production to guarantee top reliability and speed. CNC and resin capabilities are planned for future expansion.

Can you help me improve my design before printing?

Yes. Every file is manually reviewed before printing, and we’ll reach out if we spot issues or ways to improve strength, fit, or surface finish. We don’t just print, we make sure your part works.

Turn your CAD files into real parts

Upload your files and get a fast, accurate quote for manufacturing. No back and forth. We review your design and handle production from start to finish.

FDM 3D printed industrial tooling and fixtures used in a B2B manufacturing environment

Where FDM 3D Printing Actually Makes Sense in the B2B World

January 25, 20264 min read

FDM 3D printing is often dismissed as “just for prototypes”. That mindset leaves a lot of value on the table. In B2B manufacturing, FDM is not about replacing CNC or injection molding. It is about solving problems faster, cheaper, and with less risk when traditional methods are slow or inflexible.

Used correctly, FDM becomes a production tool, not a toy.


Who actually uses FDM in B2B:

FDM is already used daily by companies that care about speed, customization, and iteration.

Engineering teams use it to validate designs before committing to expensive tooling.
Manufacturing teams use it to create jigs, fixtures, and aids that keep production moving.
Maintenance teams use it to replace broken or discontinued parts on demand.
Startups use it to get products to market without burning cash on molds.
Automation and robotics teams use it for custom housings, brackets, and tooling that change frequently.

The common factor is not industry.
It is variability and speed.


What FDM is actually good at:

FDM shines when parts are:

  • Low to medium volume

  • Custom or frequently changing

  • Geometrically complex but not ultra precise

  • Needed fast

  • Used as tooling, fixtures, or functional housings

It is especially strong for:

  • Assembly jigs and fixtures

  • Test rigs and inspection tools

  • Enclosures and mounts

  • Cable guides and strain reliefs

  • End of arm tooling

  • Prototypes that are mechanically representative

  • Short run functional parts

These are not “nice to have” parts.
They directly affect production speed and reliability.


Why FDM makes sense economically:

Traditional manufacturing has a fixed cost problem. Tooling, setup, and programming make sense only when volumes are high and designs are frozen.

FDM has almost no setup cost.

That means:

  • One part costs almost the same as ten

  • Design changes are cheap

  • Iteration is fast

  • Risk is low

For many B2B applications, the part itself is not the expensive part. Waiting for it is.

If a missing fixture stops a production line, the cheapest part is the one you get today, not the one you get cheapest in four weeks.


Where FDM does not make sense:

FDM is not magic and it is not universal.

It is usually not the right choice when:

  • Tolerances are extremely tight

  • Surface finish is critical without post processing

  • Material requirements exceed thermoplastics

  • Volumes are very high and stable

Knowing where not to use FDM is just as important as knowing where to use it.


Why many companies outsource FDM instead of doing it in house:

Buying a printer is easy. Running it reliably is not.

In house FDM requires:

  • Machine calibration

  • Material handling and storage

  • Process tuning per material

  • Quality control

  • Operator time

Most companies do not want to become printing experts. They want parts that work.

Outsourcing FDM makes sense when:

  • Prints need to be reliable and repeatable

  • Engineering time is more valuable than machine time

  • Volume fluctuates

  • Multiple materials are needed

  • Lead time matters

A properly run print farm produces better parts than a printer sitting in a corner of an office.


What B2B customers should expect from a professional FDM service:

Not all printing services are the same.

A professional service should offer:

  • Material selection based on application, not availability

  • Proper calibration and process control

  • Consistent quality across batches

  • Clear pricing and lead times

  • Feedback on printability and design

This is the difference between “we can print it” and “this part will work”.


Why FDM fits modern manufacturing:

Modern manufacturing is fast, iterative, and flexible. FDM matches that reality.

It reduces dependency on long supply chains.
It lowers the cost of change.
It allows teams to test, adapt, and improve continuously.

That is why FDM keeps showing up on factory floors, not just in R&D labs.


FDM 3D printing is not a replacement for traditional manufacturing. It is a tool that fills the gap between idea and production, between problem and solution.

When used intentionally, it saves time, reduces risk, and keeps businesses moving.

If you have a part that needs to be produced quickly, customized, or iterated without the cost of tooling, FDM is often the right place to start.

We provide professional FDM 3D printing for B2B applications, from one off functional parts to short run production and manufacturing tooling.

Upload your model, choose your material, and get a real quote in minutes.

https://miloshevmachinery.com/quote

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