6 Minute English 3D Printers
6 Minute English 3D Printers
6 Minute English 3D Printers
6 Minute English
3D printers
This is not a word-for-word transcript
Sam
Hello. This is 6 Minute English from BBC Learning English. I’m Sam.
Neil
And I’m Neil. In 1436 in Germany, Johannes Gutenberg, invented the printing
press - a machine capable of making many copies of the same page of text. Ever
since, printing has been used around the world to produce books, newspapers and
magazines.
Sam
Printing technology has come a long way since Gutenberg’s time, but even today’s
most advanced laser printers have only printed flat, two-dimensional objects…
until now.
Neil
In this programme, we’re discussing 3D printers – printers which can build solid,
three-dimensional objects out of a variety of materials including plastic, concrete
and metal.
Sam
Now, Neil, when you say a printer that can make solid objects, I guess you’re not
talking about a normal printer…
Neil
That’s right, Sam. These large and complex 3D printers work in a completely
different way. Unlike a sculptor who chips away at a block of stone to reveal a
shape underneath, 3D printers work in the opposite way, building up physical
objects by adding material layer on layer. And the ability to print objects in this
way is providing solutions to many problems, as we’ll be finding out…
Sam
But first I have a question for you, Neil. Before Johannes Gutenberg invented his
printing press, copies of texts were made by block printing, using hand-carved
a) a religious teaching?
b) a cooking recipe? or,
c) a love letter?
Neil
I think it might have been a recipe.
Sam
OK, Neil. I’ll reveal the answer later in the programme. The idea of printing solid
objects is not new, but it was only after the millennium that tech companies began
to realise how it could be done. Here’s Professor Mark Miodownik, a material
scientist at University College, London, explaining more to BBC World Service
programme, People Fixing The World:
Neil
After the year 2000, 3D printers suddenly got much cheaper and tech companies
started mucking about with them – spending time playing with them in a fun way.
They realised that 3D printers had many uses - for example, they discovered that
3D printers were great at making prototypes – models of a product that can be
tested, improved and used to develop better products.
Sam
Professor Miodownik thinks these tech companies were surprised at how useful
3D printing was. He uses the phrase Hold on a minute! to express this surprise or
disbelief.
Neil
In fact, in turned out that 3D printers were excellent at making bespoke things –
objects which are made specially for a particular person. One area which 3D
printing dramatically improved was medical prosthetics - artificial body parts
made specially for someone who has lost an arm, a leg or a foot, for example.
Neil
Even before 3D printers, prosthetic eyes were custom-made, a word similar to
‘bespoke’ which means specially made according to a particular person’s
requirements. But the traditional way of making artificial eyes by hand is very
time-consuming – it takes a lot of time to do. Nowadays, 3D printing can complete
the whole process in just thirty minutes.
Sam
It’s great to see technology helping people, and amazing how far new inventions
like 3D printers have come since the days of Johannes Gutenberg… speaking of
which, Neil, it’s time to reveal the answer to my question.
Neil
Right. You asked me about the earliest known text to have been printed using
wooden blocks, and I guesses it was a cooking recipe… So, was I right?
Sam
You were… wrong, I’m afraid, Neil! The oldest known wooden block print was
actually a religious text – the Buddha’s Diamond Sutra. OK, let’s recap the
vocabulary from this programme, starting with mucking about, an informal way
to say playing with something carelessly, not for a serious reason.
Neil
A prototype is a model of a product that can be tested, improved and used to
develop a better product.
Sam
The phrase Hold on a minute! can be used to express surprise or disbelief.
Sam
The words bespoke, and custom-made describe something specially made for a
particular person.
Neil
And finally, if something is time-consuming, it takes a lot of time to do. Goodbye
for now!
Sam
Goodbye!
prototype
model of a product that can be tested, improved, and used to develop a better
product
Hold on a minute!
phrase used to express surprise or disbelief
prosthetics
man-made artificial body part such as an arm, leg, foot or eye, used to replace a
missing natural part
custom-made / bespoke
specially made to meet the requirements of a particular person
time-consuming
taking a lot of time to do