Inside a shredder with a shiny rotor shredding a big piece of black plastic

CEAD Turns 3D Printing Waste into New Possibilities with WEIMA Shredding Technology

Based in Delft, CEAD Group B.V. develops and builds large-format additive manufacturing (LFAM) systems for the marine, construction, and composite industries. Their pellet-based 3D printing technology enables customers to produce full-scale components, from complex molds and rapid prototypes to entire boats, using fiber-reinforced thermoplastic composites (FRP).
This cutting-edge pellet extrusion process provides maximum design flexibility and an accelerated design-to-production cycle. Yet, it also produces a common challenge for any research-driven production process: what happens to the discarded prints and prototypes?

When Prototyping Creates Waste

Each new print iteration pushes the limits of what’s possible in industrial-format 3D printing. But discarded parts and prototype structures, often made from glass- or carbon-fiber reinforced polymers, quickly accumulate.

At CEAD’s Maritime Application Center, where massive boat sections are printed, the scale of production means that leftover prints can weigh several hundred kilograms. Disposing of such large pieces through conventional means was neither efficient nor sustainable. A smarter solution was needed.

A large robotic arm with an extrusion device for large-format 3D printing

Large-format 3D printer from CEAD

Close-up of the 3D printing process with a printed part in the foreground

Large-format 3D printing at CEAD

Three professionals at CEAD examine a large 3D-printed composite part, discussing material recycling and production quality in an industrial setting.

Discarded 3D printing piece at CEAD

The Solution: WEIMA WLK 4 Single-Shaft Shredder

After consulting with industry partners, CEAD found its ideal recycling solution in WEIMA. The installed a WEIMA WLK 4 single-shaft shredder with a 10 mm screen easily handles reinforced thermoplastic components and converts them into uniform flakes around 10 mm in size.

These flakes serve as the perfect intermediate material for reprocessing and upcycling, supporting CEAD’s long-term goal of achieving a closed-loop material workflow — from print to product to print again. The machine’s durability and ease of operation make it a reliable asset in CEAD’s additive manufacturing ecosystem.

An orange shredder in an industrial hall with large 3D printed pieces in the foreground.

WEIMA WLK 4 at CEAD for 3D printing waste recycling

Inside a shredder with a shiny rotor shredding a big piece of black plastic

Shredding of a discarded 3D print

Flakes of grey plastic after shredding

Flakes of fiber-reinforced thermoplastic composites (FRP) after shredding

Flakes of grey plastic after shredding hold by hands

Flakes of fiber-reinforced thermoplastic composites (FRP) after shredding

3D Printing Waste Shredding

The application in video
Inside a shredder with a shiny rotor shredding a big piece of black plastic
Successstory
Shredding of large format 3D printing waste with a WEIMA WLK 4 at CEAD Group
At CEAD, a specialist for large-format 3D printing, a WEIMA WLK 4 single-shaft shredder is used to efficiently recycle production waste. Failed prints and oversized prototypes are transformed into reusable flakes, ready for further processing into pellets and reintroduced into the printing cycle.
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Reliable Partnership, Proven Performance
What our customer says

WEIMA for me is reliable, easy to operate, and a trustworthy partner.
We’ve been using the shredder frequently without any breakdowns, and it performs perfectly in an industrial environment.

Mark Muilwijk
Material and Process Specialist at CEAD

Researching the Next Step: Pelletizing for Reuse

Together with several Dutch R&D partners, CEAD is now exploring how the shredded material can be repelletized for reuse in pellet extrusion 3D printers. Early trials are promising, showing that short fiber-reinforced composites can be successfully transformed into new feedstock materials without compromising print quality. This approach not only reduces material waste but also opens new pathways for sustainable, closed-loop additive manufacturing.

A large format 3D printer prints a black boat

3D printing of a small boat at CEADs Maritime Application Center

The WEIMA shredder has become a trusted part of CEAD’s workflow — combining reliability with simplicity in daily operation.
With WEIMA technology as part of its end-to-end manufacturing workflow, CEAD is redefining what sustainable large-format additive manufacturing can look like.

Patrick Henzler, Sales Director at WEIMA, in front of a green plant background with a white shirt, smiling
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Turn plastic waste into valuable material – we can help you do it.

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Katherina Baborsky

Marketing

WEIMA Maschinenbau GmbH

Bustadt 6-10

74360 Ilsfeld

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