Pages

Friday, 12 July 2013

NASA 3D-prints and fires rocket engine component


Star Trek's Mr. Scott will have fewer reasons to panic as the day comes closer when even rocket engines can be cranked out on 3D printers. In recent tests, NASA and Aerojet Rocketdyne fired a rocket engine injector at NASA's Glenn Research Center in Cleveland, Ohio that was made using a 3D printer. The project, done in collaboration between NASA and private industry, aims at speeding up the manufacture of rocket components while reducing costs as well as eventually printing them in space... Continue Reading NASA 3D-prints and fires rocket engine component

Section: Space

Tags: 3D Printing, NASA, Rocket, Spacecraft

Related Articles:
NASA using 3D laser printing to create complex rocket parts
SpaceX's Merlin 1D engine now qualified for use on the Falcon 9 rocket
Successful first launch of Antares rocket
NASA tests eco-friendly rocket fuel
Boeing wins construction bid for Ares I
NASA's NEXT ion thruster runs five and a half years nonstop to set new record

No comments:

Post a Comment

Rules for submitting comments:

1. No profanity. I maintain the pretense that this is a family-friendly site.

2. Stay on topic. A bit of straying and off-hand commenting is okay, but hijacking the discussion is right out.

3. No ad hominem attacks. Attack the subject, not the other person on the thread and keep the discussion civil.

4. No spamming or commercial endorsements. These get deleted immediately.

Tip: Beware of putting hyperlinks in your comments–especially at the end. For some reason, Blogger interprets these as spam.

Note: Due to the recent spate of anonymous spamming, registration for comments is now required.