HardwareTel Aviv, IsraelFounded 2015· One of 1708 Hardware companies tracked by AMPulse
Develops a Robotic Production Platform using Cold 3D Printing® for autonomous, on-demand production of custom polymer products like PP and PET.
CEO / Founder
Ronen Orr
Team Size
1-10
Stage
Active
Total Funding
$4.3M
Latest Round
Venture Round
Key Investors
Plasson Ltd.; OurCrowd
Technology & Products
Key Products
Robotic Production Platform
Technological Advantage
Enables production of large-format parts using materials like PP and PET without the typical shrinkage or cost issues of standard additive manufacturing.
Differentiation
Value Proposition
Reduces production costs and lead times for large-scale polymer parts by replacing manual labor with an autonomous robotic platform using proprietary Cold 3D Printing® technology.
How They Differentiate
First to market with a commercial Robotic Production Platform for digital custom products using Cold 3D Printing®; specifically targets the global manufacturing manpower crisis.
Market & Competition
Target Customers
Manufacturers in labor-intensive industries facing skilled labor shortages.
Raised $1.2M in May 2023; Successfully commercialized proprietary Cold 3D Printing® technology for industrial PP/PE production; Expanded into European markets via Italian investor network; 10+ employees
Major Milestones
Founded in 2015; Developed Cold 3D Printing® technology; Commercialized Robotic Production Platform
Largix Tech addresses the skilled labor shortage in polymer manufacturing by replacing manual production with an autonomous robotic platform. Its Cold 3D Printing® technology extrudes thermoplastics like polypropylene and PET at room temperature, avoiding the shrinkage and warping common in high-heat additive processes. This enables large-format parts without the cost penalties of conventional AM.
The Robotic Production Platform integrates AI, machine learning, and laser systems to operate without human intervention. By using standard industrial pellets rather than filament, it reduces material costs and simplifies supply chains. The process is tailored for manufacturers in aerospace, construction, defense, and architecture that need on-demand, custom polymer components.
Largix has commercialized its platform with industrial partners including Schoeller Allibert, Plasson, and Lipski. It raised $4.3 million from investors such as Plasson Ltd. and OurCrowd, with a $1.2 million round in May 2023. The company competes with Caracol AM, CEAD, and Millebot in the large-format polymer extrusion space, but claims first-mover advantage with its cold extrusion approach.
The key open question is whether Cold 3D Printing® can match the throughput and material properties of heated large-format systems like CEAD's or Caracol's. Largix's reliance on PP and PET limits its addressable market versus systems that handle engineering-grade composites, though the lower energy cost and simpler tooling may appeal to manufacturers seeking a drop-in replacement for manual fabrication.
Competitive Intelligence
Competitors, SWOT analysis, and investment insights