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SprintRay CEO Amir Mansouri confirmed the company has achieved $100 million in annual revenue as it continues to focus on its specialized dental vat polymerization ecosystem.
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SprintRay CEO Amir Mansouri confirmed the company has achieved $100 million in annual revenue as it continues to focus on its specialized dental vat polymerization ecosystem.

SprintRay
SprintRay

Hardware

Originally reported by 3DPrint.com

SprintRay CEO Amir Mansouri confirmed the company has achieved $100 million in annual revenue as it continues to focus on its specialized dental vat polymerization ecosystem. The Los Angeles-based manufacturer is prioritizing deep vertical integration within the dental market rather than diversifying into broader industrial additive manufacturing sectors. SprintRay maintains its competitive edge by developing proprietary resins and hardware systems specifically optimized for high-throughput dental applications, including dentures and restorative teeth production. The company operates primarily within the North American and global dental clinical markets, emphasizing a closed-loop workflow that connects 3D scanning, software, and hardware.

This strategic focus on dental-specific vertical integration positions SprintRay as a direct competitor to established players like 3D Systems and Formlabs, which also target the dental chairside market. By avoiding horizontal expansion into general-purpose additive manufacturing, SprintRay mitigates the risks associated with broader market volatility and maintains higher margins through specialized material and software ecosystems. The dental sector remains a high-growth area for vat polymerization, driven by the transition from analog impressions to digital workflows in private practices and laboratories. The company's ability to scale to $100 million in revenue demonstrates the viability of the dedicated dental-vertical business model in a crowded 3D printing landscape.

SprintRay's continued success depends on its ability to maintain high material performance standards and seamless software integration for dental practitioners. The company must continue to refine its resin portfolio to meet stringent regulatory requirements for long-term intraoral use. For end-users, the focus remains on the reliability of the end-to-end workflow rather than raw hardware specifications. Future growth will likely be dictated by the company's success in expanding its installed base within dental service organizations and large-scale laboratory networks.

Topics

SprintRayvat polymerizationdental 3D printingadditive manufacturingdental resinsdigital dentistryUS manufacturing

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