Chinese carrier rocket company Land Space successfully launched its ZQ-3 VRVL-1 reusable vertical takeoff and landing (VTVL) recovery-test rocket, which featured several additive manufactured components.
On this episode of the Additive Insight podcast, TCT Group Content Manager Sam Davies is joined by Joe Laurienti, the founder and CEO of aerospace company Ursa Major Technologies.
The company will double its NXG XII 600 capacity at its West Des Moines, Iowa facility and expand the facility’s existing material capabilities to better serve its customers.
Airbus and AddUp have developed for the European Space Agency what it says is the first metal 3D printer for space. The system will soon be tested aboard the Columbus module of the International Space Station (ISS).
TRUMPF is set to collaborate with European space-travel start-up The Exploration Company on the construction of core components for spacecraft for missions in the Earth’s orbit and to the moon.
Together, Farsoon and Deep Blue Aerospace have been working to deliver higher yield with reduced costs in the additive manufacture of large-size parts exceeding 600mm.
Sidus Space, a multi-faceted Space and Data-as-a-Service company, has announced the achievement of a new milestone, the opening of its new Multi-Material 3D Printing Division.
GKN Aerospace has announced a £50 million (600 million SEK) investment in “cutting-edge” 3D printing technology in Trollhättan, Sweden. The Swedish Energy Agency’s Industriklivet initiative will fund £12 million (152 million SEK) of the investment.
Materialise has signed a Letter of Intent (LOI) with aerospace distributor Proponent and aerospace design organisation Stirling Dynamics aimed at providing certified cabin solutions for aircraft.
A liquid rocket engine built under the Sunride Project and successfully fired as part of the Race to Space initiative is believed to be the first metallic 3D printed rocket engine to be built and successfully tested by students in the UK.
This isn’t just science fiction anymore.” The words of Dr. Amit Bandyopadhyay of Washington State University as we begin our conversation over Zoom. Bandyopadhyay has been a professor at the university since 1997.
Advanced construction 3D printing company ICON has been selected by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) to take part in its ten-year Lunar Architecture (LunA-10) capability study.