June 27, 2017 | Volume 13 Issue 24 |
Manufacturing Center
Product Spotlight
Modern Applications News
Metalworking Ideas For
Today's Job Shops
Tooling and Production
Strategies for large
metalworking plants
By Tomas Kellner, GE Reports
3D printing is growing up. Literally. GE Additive, a new GE business dedicated to supplying 3D printers, materials, and engineering consulting services, announced recently it is developing the world's largest laser-powered 3D printer that prints parts from metal powder.
The printer will be able to make parts that fit inside a cube with 1-m sides. "The machine will 3D print aviation parts suitable for making jet engine structural components and parts for single-aisle aircraft," said Mohammad Ehteshami, vice president and general manager of GE Additive. "It will also be applicable for manufacturers in the automotive, power, and oil and gas industries."
Additive machines fuse together fine layers of powdered metal with a laser beam and print three-dimensional objects directly from a computer file. With few limits on the final shape, the method gives engineers new freedoms and eliminates the need for factories filled with specialized machines or expensive tooling. "This is an engineer's dream," Ehteshami said.
Ehteshami's business made the announcement June 20, 2017, at the Paris Air Show. It plans to unveil the machine in November at the Formnext Show in Frankfurt, Germany.
VIDEO: The X LINE 2000R is the world's largest metal melting machine (160 l build volume) for the toolless manufacture of large functional components and technical prototypes with series-identical (also reactive) material properties.
GE Aviation is already printing fuel nozzles for the LEAP family of jet engines that power next-generation Airbus, Boeing, and COMAC single-aisle jets. Airbus and Boeing brought two of the planes to the Paris Air Show. The company also is developing the Advanced Turboprop, the first commercial aircraft engine in history with a large portion of components made by additive manufacturing methods, which include 3D printing. The designers reduced 855 separate parts down to just 12. As a result, more than a third of the engine is 3D printed.
Another plane flying in Paris is an Airbus A350 XWB, which has wing brackets made on a 3D printer designed by the German company Concept Laser. Last year, GE acquired a majority stake in Concept Laser, and the company is now part of GE Additive. Concept Laser currently makes the largest metal power printer (see video above), and its engineers will work on the new machine together with GE experts.
The first "demonstrator" version of the printer, called ATLAS, will 3D print objects up to 1 m long in at least two directions from titanium, aluminum, and other metals.
The production version, still to be named, will extend the third dimension to a meter. GE Additive said the machine's "build geometry will be customizable and scalable for an individual customer's project. Its feature resolution and build-rate speeds will equal or better today's additive machines."
"We have customers collaborating with us, and they will receive beta versions of the machine by year's end," Ehteshami said. The production version will be available for purchase next year, he added.
An engine block printed on a Concept Laser machine. [Image credit: Concept Laser]
The first "demonstrator" version of the printer, called ATLAS, will 3D print objects up to 1 m long in at least two directions from titanium, aluminum, and other metals. [Image credit: Concept Laser]
Read more GE Reports at www.gereports.com.
Source: GE Reports
Published June 2017