Resolves when a printed printer manufactures a working printer. This is similar to the Reprap project, but must use only printed circuitry.
Details:
- Human assembly of printed components is acceptable 
- Can involve multiple printed machines in the same location, so long as the set of machines can duplicate itself 
- Raw material inputs like these are acceptable: - ABS or similar plastic filament 
- Various metals & powders 
- Insulated copper or fiber optic wire bought in bulk 
- Other unspecialized components of similarly low price 
 
- Moderate degradation of performance or reliability in the output copy is acceptable if the system is still somewhat usable. 
- These must basically be 3D printers, ie: it must be possible to use these printers to make other similar output items, using materials like metal & plastic. 
Spirit of the question:
- When can a person run a 'printer farm'? 
- When can they use their printer inventory to make more printers? 
- When is this technology first demonstrated? 
- These printers will be roughly the same size, material composition, & degree of complexity as modern 3D printers. 
@ConnorDolan Ha, i see what you're saying. I should edit the description to exclude living organisms from this.