ServiceRotterdam, NetherlandsFounded 2016· One of 1986 Service companies tracked by AMPulse
Pioneer in Wire Arc Additive Manufacturing (WAAM) for certified large-scale metal parts
CEO / Founder
Vincent Wegener
Team Size
11-50
Stage
Active
Total Funding
$11.9M
Latest Round
Strategic Investment
Key Investors
Valk Welding, Port of Rotterdam, InnovationQuarter, EU
Technology & Products
Key Products
MaxQ (automated metal repair & manufacturing system), WAAM (Wire Arc Additive Manufacturing) systems for metal 3D printing and repair.
Technological Advantage
Automated WAAM with certified quality for large-scale metal parts
Differentiation
Value Proposition
Certified metal parts on-demand through Wire Arc Additive Manufacturing
How They Differentiate
Fieldlab model with certification expertise and partner ecosystem; offers MaxQ, an automated metal repair & manufacturing system, to boost efficiency and precision and solve labor shortages.
Market & Competition
Target Customers
Maritime, offshore, heavy industry, energy sector
Industry Verticals
Maritime, Offshore, Energy, Heavy Industry
Competitors
WAAM3D, Gefertec, MX3D
Growth & Milestones
Growth Metrics
Dozens of WAAM systems delivered to clients including Vallourec, Deep Manufacturing, EWI
Major Milestones
2016: Founded at RDM Rotterdam, EU Grade2XL €10M project, 2024: Strategic investment from Valk Welding, Global expansion
Notable Customers
Vallourec, Deep Manufacturing, EWI (Edison Welding Institute)
RAMLAB operates as a fieldlab dedicated to Wire Arc Additive Manufacturing (WAAM), a DED-arc process that builds large metal parts layer by layer from wire feedstock. Unlike many service bureaus that focus on powder-bed fusion for smaller components, RAMLAB targets the production and repair of meter-scale parts for maritime, offshore, energy, and heavy industry. Its fieldlab model combines R&D, production, and certification under one roof, a structure that differentiates it from contract manufacturers that lack in-house qualification capabilities.
The company's core product is the MaxQ, an automated system for metal repair and manufacturing that integrates WAAM with robotic motion control. RAMLAB also sells WAAM systems to clients and provides on-demand part production. The technology is designed to reduce lead times and material waste compared to traditional casting or forging, while enabling the restoration of high-value components such as ship propellers, pump housings, and offshore structural elements.
RAMLAB serves customers in maritime, offshore, energy, and heavy industry, with named clients including Vallourec, Deep Manufacturing, and EWI. The company has delivered dozens of WAAM systems and parts to these sectors. Its strategic investor, Valk Welding, and partnerships with the Port of Rotterdam, Autodesk, IBM, Lincoln Electric, and Huisman provide access to welding expertise, design software, and industrial end-users.
The company's competitive moat lies in its certification methodology for WAAM parts, which is critical for safety-regulated industries. Competitors such as WAAM3D, Gefertec, and MX3D offer similar DED-arc processes, but RAMLAB's fieldlab structure and partner ecosystem create a vertically integrated path from development to qualified production. An open question is whether the company can scale its MaxQ system sales beyond early adopters and maintain certification throughput as demand grows.
Competitive Intelligence
Competitors, SWOT analysis, and investment insights