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FWIW, at work we're now using resin and FDM extensively for all kinds of weird things (e.g. printing skull surrogate bone materials that are actually porous like live bone, not just solid as most are).


Resin is the go-to for some very specific applications, especially if you need tiny details, and the variety of what you can do is massive (we just printed something in squishy silicone, how crazy is that). However the newest gen of FDM printers can do almost anything that a home hobbyist would ever need.


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