Addept 3D
Provides Wire Arc Additive Manufacturing (WAAM®) solutions for large-format and customized metal parts production.
- CEO / Founder
- Lee Chee Weng
- Team Size
- 1-10
- Stage
- Active
- Total Funding
- Undisclosed
- Latest Round
- Corporate Round
- Key Investors
- Accuron Technologies; WAAM3D
Technology & Products
Key Products
Comprehensive WAAM solutions including hardware (RoboWAAM systems), software (WAAMCtrl operating system), materials (specialized wire feedstock), and services (business case assessments, prototyping, project management, training). Provides turnkey WAAM solutions for large-format metal parts manufacturing.
Technological Advantage
Combines WAAM3D's proprietary metal DED technology with Accuron's regional manufacturing infrastructure to provide localized high-end metal AM services.
Differentiation
Value Proposition
Enables cost-effective and efficient production of large, complex metal geometries using WAAM® technology through a dedicated Singapore-based application centre.
How They Differentiate
Specializes in large-format metal DED (WAAM) specifically for the Southeast Asian market, leveraging proprietary technology from WAAM3D.
Market & Competition
Target Customers
Companies in Southeast Asia and global industrial firms requiring large-scale metal components.
Industry Verticals
Precision manufacturing; Industrial
Competitors
AML3D; Gefertec; RAMLAB
Growth & Milestones
Growth Metrics
Production: Equipped with RoboWAAM Advanced system capable of deposition rates exceeding 15 kg/h for large-format metal components.. Founded in July 2021 as a joint venture between WAAM3D (UK) and Accuron Technologies (Singapore).; Commissioned and installed the first RoboWAAM Advanced system in Singapore in April 2022.; Established as a regional WAAM application center to provide 'first-right-part' building and end-use part production services.
Major Milestones
2021: Established as Singapore-based WAAM application centre via WAAM3D-Accuron JV; Accuron Technologies makes additional investment to accelerate growth