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Article Stratasys Enters Metal AM Through Partnership With Tritone Technologies Image

Stratasys has expanded its additive manufacturing portfolio beyond polymers, formalizing a strategic collaboration with Israel-based Tritone Technologies. The move brings Tritone’s MoldJet® metal and ceramic AM systems into Stratasys’ offering, giving aerospace, defense, and industrial customers an integrated path to serial-grade metal production within the Stratasys ecosystem.

The agreement includes an investment and a phased commercial partnership that will allow Stratasys to support Tritone’s reseller network, align sales channels, and help scale the technology globally.

Demand for this capability has grown steadily. Aerospace and defense customers have pushed for an industrial-grade metal process that matches Stratasys’ existing reliability and service levels. Tritone’s MoldJet platform fits that need. It is a powder-free system that forms mold cavities layer-by-layer, fills them with high-density metal paste, and then debinds and sinters the finished parts. The method supports complex geometries, quick alloy changeovers, and batch production of multiple part types at once.

The companies highlight MoldJet’s ability to produce high-density parts with mechanical properties aligned to industry standards. That combination (material quality, process repeatability, and industrial throughput) positions MoldJet for tooling inserts, medical components, defense hardware, and precision assemblies requiring tight dimensional control.

Stratasys frames the partnership as an answer to customer demand for a “reliable, industrial-grade metal solution.” Tritone sees it as validation of a technology built for scalable manufacturing rather than one-off prototyping. Both expect the collaboration to reduce barriers that still slow metal AM adoption, including fragmented supply chains and multi-vendor integration challenges.

With SYS Systems now preparing to offer Tritone systems in the UK and broader market expansion planned, MoldJet is set to reach a wider engineering audience. Organizations looking to bring metal AM into established production workflows could see the Stratasys–Tritone partnership deliver a more predictable, factory-centric on-ramp to industrial metal printing.

Article & Image Source: Stratasys

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