How It Works

How HyperPrint works

HyperPrint is a large-format extrusion printer engineered around one idea: the machine should go to the work, not the other way around. Big fixes, no headache.

1. It rides the rail in a container

The entire system is built to transport, stage, and operate inside a standard ISO shipping container, and the container form-factor is the deployment mechanism, not just the packaging. Load it on a flatcar or well car and send it down the rail network you already run. Stage it at a siding, a depot, or a remote site on a level pad, and operate it in place. Move it by truck or flatbed when rail isn't the route. Either way there's no permanent installation, no industrial bay to build out, no facility retrofit. The factory comes to the work.

2. It runs off-grid, on infrastructure you own

HyperPrint is solar-compatible and runs off-grid. It doesn't need a three-phase industrial hookup, which is exactly why it works at trackside sites, remote sidings, and rural yards where that infrastructure was never run. Pair it with a generator or a solar array and print.

That independence is the real point. Materializing a massive assembly has always meant being near a dense industrial and electronics supply ecosystem, the kind that took decades to concentrate overseas. Not in Shenzhen? Not a problem. HyperPrint lets you stand up your own fabrication infrastructure anywhere, with no industrial corridor and no overseas supply chain in the loop. You own the capability and you deploy it where the work is.

3. Infinite Z, infinite potential

Conventional printers cap part height at the gantry frame. HyperPrint's infinite Z-axis builds continuously along the travel axis, so the length of a part is bounded by your floor space and feedstock, not by the machine. Print a structural member longer than the printer, a full-length rolling-stock panel, or a multi-section assembly that exceeds the machine's own footprint, in a single run, with no seams to splice or sections to weld together afterward. These are the big fixes: the large, out-of-production parts that legacy gantry systems reserve for six-figure industrial machines. Infinite Z, infinite potential.

4. It survives the environment it works in

The base system is IP64-rated: dust-protected and resistant to water spray from any direction. It's meant for sheds, yards, and open-air sites. The Upgraded Flood Resistance load-out adds IP66 waterproofing and full flood resistance, and the defense load-out adds armored enclosures and MIL-STD-810 certification for shock, vibration, temperature, and immersion.

5. You design, it builds

Feed it a model, queue the job, and walk away. The output is the tooling, fixtures, brackets, housings, and large parts your team would otherwise wait weeks to source, produced on your schedule, on your site.


The result is a fabrication capability you own and control, sitting where your equipment already is. No corridor. No overseas supply ecosystem. No twelve-week lead time. No factory to build first. It's the bridge you run while the reshored supply chain catches up to your site, and the tool you keep after.

See what teams print with it →