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Manufacturing Technology Insights | Thursday, June 20, 2024
Additive manufacturing is a procedure that involves adding material to the structure of a three-dimensional item one layer at a time using printable CAD data. It is also known as three-dimensional printing.
Fremont, CA: The aerospace sector faces significant manufacturing challenges. Aerospace parts are highly complex and structurally resilient, meeting virtually any industry's most stringent quality assurance standards. Many aerospace companies are shifting from traditional production methods to additive manufacturing to produce the intricate parts they need efficiently. 3D printing in aerospace, based on CATIA models, is revolutionizing the aerospace manufacturing industry by changing the way parts are produced. Here are four ways additive manufacturing is employed in aircraft:
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Building parts with complex geometries
Aerospace components, ranging from helicopter parts to turbine engines, require complicated geometric shapes in sometimes restricted locations.
Rather than creating small, detailed elements separately and combining them into a whole, a design engineer may use printed CAD data to produce 3D models of the complete structure, including inner components. The 3D printer may then make a single, seamless component with complicated internal measurements and complex geometries, eliminating the need for assembly. This approach can be used to manufacture jet engines for airplanes additively.
Additive manufacturing allows for the production of sophisticated pieces from various materials, including metal and carbon fiber, with minimal lead time and energy.
More Efficient Prototyping
Aerospace engineers may generate and print prototypes in just a fraction of the time that traditional manufacturing processes would take. By generating and testing prototypes more quickly, aerospace firms may shorten their time to market and remain ahead of the competition.
In aerospace, components must be manufactured according to requirements. The specification procedure is well-established in traditional manufacturing. However, certifying that a manufactured item was built according to specifications is more complicated because the specification process was not designed with additive manufacturing in mind.
Cost-Effective Production
Additive manufacturing can shorten the time needed to develop prototypes while lowering costs.
In many aircraft applications, traditional production can result in up to 98 percent material loss. Subtraction can result in many metal chips, and producing the correct mold can be time-consuming.
Because additive manufacturing adds material rather than subtracts it, it may significantly minimize material waste, allowing firms to save money on production. Establishing additive manufacturing techniques involves early costs. However, the long-term savings surpass the initial expenditures.
Increase Parts’ Internal Strength
When more minor elements are merged to form a more significant entity, the structural integrity of the whole is compromised. Design engineers may use additive printing to construct whole pieces, including hollow cores and inner components, without needing weak and susceptible connections.
Furthermore, additive manufacturing in the aerospace sector has the potential to enhance composite materials significantly. This is one area where additive manufacturing has a significant edge over traditional manufacturing.
When you put down your slice or sections toward the force, your final portion will be highly potent.
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