Manufacturing the Future

Eaton's Cameron Peahl on Building Additive Strategies That Work

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Dec 11, 2025
Cameron Peahl, Global Additive Manufacturing Strategy Manager at Eaton, brings over a decade of expertise in transforming manufacturing. He discusses the critical cultural shift necessary for successful additive integration. Cameron emphasizes that organizations must avoid treating 3D printing as a simple replacement for traditional methods. He shares insights on Eaton's four-pillar strategy, the importance of supply-chain resiliency, and how on-site 3D printing enhances employee engagement. With practical advice on balancing additive and conventional methods, he paints a compelling picture of the future of manufacturing.
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INSIGHT

Four-Pillar Additive Strategy

  • Eaton organizes additive into four strategic pillars: prototyping, operations support (including tooling), supply chain resiliency, and superior product.
  • Each pillar demands different processes, governance, tech stacks, skills and scale plans for global adoption.
ADVICE

Choose Reliable, Easy-To-Use Systems

  • Prioritize reliable, easy-to-use machines so adoption isn't blocked by downtime or heavy tinkering.
  • Choose vendors that provide robust support and a tech stack that global sites can operate without expert intervention.
INSIGHT

Why Supply Resiliency Is Hard

  • Supply-chain resiliency via direct part replacement is the hardest pillar because parts are designed for conventional processes and need full requalification.
  • Superior-product play (design freedoms, part consolidation, performance gains) usually creates a stronger business case than mere replacement.
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