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Kia Concept SUV Features 3D Printed Parts

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While auto companies have been implementing 3D printing for prototyping purposes for some time, its use for creating end parts will be increasingly adopted by industries across the board. That day is slowly dawning, as more firms attempt to find components that can be 3D printed for their car models. Often times, this is limited to non-critical parts, often framing the use of 3D printing as more of a marketing tool than a useful technology. That seems to be the case in Kia’s latest concept car, the Kia Telluride, being presented at the North American International Auto Show (NAIAS).

Kia’s three-row, seven-passenger, luxury SUV concept is designed to be roomy, comfortable, and technologically-focused. The concept car has some less exciting, but still unique features, like 90 degree swinging doors and fold-away footrests. More interesting are the smart sensors embedded within the seats that monitor a rider’s vital health info, displayed on door panel screens. An LED panel mounted below the oversized sunroof displays what the company describes as “a pattern of therapeutic light to treat desynchronosis (jetlag) and improve the passengers’ energy levels.” The Telluride’s Swipe Command interface is a touch-sensitive command console for selecting media and wirelessly charging a set of Harman Kardon® headphones contained within. And a compartment in the front of the SUV also allows for wireless cell phone charging.

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Other features include the massive size of the thing and LED lights for the headlamps and indicatore lights, as well as a PHEV powertrain, a 3.5-liter gasoline direct injected (GDI) V6 engine, and an electric motor, allowing it to achieve 30 mpg on the highway and produce 270 horsepower from the V6 and 130 from the electric motor.

Finally, 3D printing comes into play in the Telluride’s dashboard, door panels, and steering wheel, making this the first use of 3D printing for end parts by Kia. The company has not yet explained the purpose of 3D printing these components – whether it allowed for lighter weight parts or unique shapes, etc. – but only say that they “add a distinct, modern design element” to the auto.

It’s hard to think of the Telluride as being that cutting edge when it still runs partially on gas and has a 3D printed steering wheel, but we can easily say that Kia’s description of the SUV concept as “anything but a utopian fantasy” is definitely untrue. Maybe we’re just bummed that David Bowie is dead. Still, 30 mpg and carrying seven people seems like nothing when Buckminster Fuller’s Dymaxion Car was able to get 30 mpg in 1933 and he was designing, not for profit, but to meet the needs of ever person on Earth.

—The article is from 3D Printing Industry

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