domingo, 14 de febrero de 2016

Additive Manufacturing: "Imagine the Possibilities"


Additive Manufacturing allows engineers to create complex geometries out of polymers, metals, and composites that are not possible through traditional manufacturing techniques.


Logisticians are seriously looking at Additive Manufacturing, which promises to allow the military to print parts in-theatre, significantly reducing the burden on the supply chain.


Rear Admiral Vincent Griffith, Director of DLA Logistics Operations at the Defense Logistics Agency is excited about the possibilities additive manufacturing offers: “One area that strikes a chord with DLA is 3D printing, because of the potential additive manufacturing has for helping us obtain obsolete and hard-to-source parts for the more than 2,400 weapon systems we support. Additive manufacturing is a fairly new concept, but we’re thinking big. We want to expand our additive manufacturing parts catalog for integration into the supply system; produce approved critical safety item parts; establish and maintain a parts-on-demand capability; and have a library of Technical Data Packages with 3D models to enable faster production.”

miércoles, 10 de febrero de 2016

El Grupo Integral abre centro de Manufactura Aditiva en Barcelona

El Grupo Integral abre un centro de Manufactura Aditiva en Barcelona


Mañana Jueves 11 de febrero el Grupo Integral Innovation Solutions abre al público su nuevo centro de Manufactura Aditiva, ubicado en un nuevo local anexo a sus oficinas centrales de Barcelona ( Plaza de Josep Pallach nº 4 ). Durante la jornada inaugural se ofrecerán ponencias en las que se analizará el estado actual de la manufactura aditiva, y se podrán ver trabajando diversas impresoras 3D y sistemas de producción 3D.

Más información: http://integralplm.com/es/empresa/showroom-impresion-3d/

lunes, 4 de enero de 2016

China: Rail-Mobile ICBM DF-41 Test


China’s Defense Ministry confirmed on Thursday 31th that its military recently conducted a test of a new rail-mobile ICBM capable of hitting any part of the United States with up to 10 nuclear warheads.


With a believed top speed of 30.000 Km/H and a range of up to 12.000 Km, the DF-41 competes directly with the US LGM-30 Minuteman which has a reported range of 13.000 km and a top speed of 24.000 Km/H.

miércoles, 30 de diciembre de 2015

Pentagon: Additive Manufacturing for ICBM Programs


The Pentagon has released a solicitation to identify and develop cost effective Additive Manufacturing materials, processes, and techniques sufficient to prototype and produce future components supporting current and future ICBM programs.

Specific areas to address for maximum future benefit include reducing the cost to manufacture structural parts, reducing the mass or fabrication cost of complex components, or creating an in-house capability for depots and maintenance personnel to manufacture spares on-demand.

Also of interest are concepts for adding extra functionality to existing parts such as printed circuit boards with integrated shielding with the end goal of creating production parts which are inherently hardened without a requirement for additional external shielding to reduce parts count, material, and mass.

Regardless of the material, approach, or component proposed for improvement, the final product must meet or exceed all of the technical specifications of the current component or system i.e. structural loads, operating/survival temperature, radiation shielding, EMI/EMC, vacuum compatibility, launch/flight loads, storage requirements, etc.




lunes, 28 de diciembre de 2015

The Truth About 3-D Printing and Nuclear Proliferation


In a recent article, Amy Nelson (Stanton Nuclear Security Fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations) analyzes the level of risk of Nuclear Proliferation as a result of Additive Manufacturing proliferation. Read the full article through this link: 

domingo, 22 de noviembre de 2015

Pruebas de Patriot en Grecia


El pasado 17 de noviembre se han llevado a cabo con éxito varios disparos con el sistema de armamento PATRIOT, como parte de la Evaluación de Tiro Táctico de la Fuerza Aérea Griega.

lunes, 16 de noviembre de 2015

Additive Manufacturing as a Tool for Manufacturers


Though the Internet of Things has captured the lion’s share of new technology interest from manufacturers over the past couple of years, Additive Manufacturing continues its advance into the industry. (Read more)

miércoles, 7 de octubre de 2015

Impresión 3D para la industria militar



La empresa Integral PLM Experts ofrecerá el próximo viernes 9 un Webcast sobre fabricación digital directa de utillaje industrial.
Esta presentación está dirigida a todas aquellas personas que estén interesadas en descubrir cómo la fabricación aditiva aplicada a la producción de utillajes les puede ayudar a reducir costes y tiempos y a maximizar la ergonomía en el proceso de montaje y fabricación.

Agenda:

Dia: Viernes 9 de octubre
Hora: 10am (gmt+1)

Lugar: Internet
Coste: Gratuito

Inscripción: http://integralplm.com/es/empresa/eventos/

viernes, 18 de septiembre de 2015

El SMC apuesta por la Manufactura Aditiva


El U.S. Air Force Space and Missile Systems Center (SMC) ha firmado con la compaía UES Inc. (Dayton, OH) un contrato por valor de 2.9 millones de dólares (financiado por el Fondo de Innovación Rápida de la USAFpara investigar y desarrollar nuevas tecnologías de Manufactura Digital Aditiva, susceptibles de ser aplicadas en el desarrollo de nuevos y más avanzados sistemas de misiles. El UES contará para este proyecto con la colaboración de otras empresas del sector aeroespacial y militar, entre las que destacan Faraday Technology Inc. y Aerojet Rocketdyne, ambas con sede en California.

sábado, 12 de septiembre de 2015

Raytheon to focus on Additive Manufacturing


“When we print something, we have fewer piece parts, so our supply chain becomes simpler, our development cycles are shorted and we can get a lot more complex with our design because we can print angles that we can’t machine into metal.” says Leah Hull, Additive Manufacturing manager for Raytheon.


Engineers at the Raytheon University of Massachusetts Lowell Research Institute are exploring the use of Additive Manufacturing to lay down conductive materials for electrical circuits, create housings for the company's revolutionary gallium nitride transmitters, fabricate fins for guided artillery shells, and building blocks of sophisticated radars used in products like Raytheon’s Patriot air and missile defense system.


¿What is actually envisioning Raytheon? In words of Jeremy Danforth, a Raytheon engineer who has printed working rocket motors, “Machines making machines. That’s the vision.” and for Dr. Teresa Clement, a Raytheon materials expert who also serves as the chair of the executive committee of America Makes, an initiative of the National Additive Manufacturing Innovation Institute, “Additive Manufacturing allows us to perform rapid changes because engineers only need change the digital model representing the part."



Researchers at Raytheon Missile Systems say they have already created nearly every component of a guided weapon using additive manufacturing. But, ¿Could soldiers someday print and assemble missiles on the spot, in the same way that artillery crews custom-load their rounds or weapons handlers mount guidance kits on some types of bombs? For Chris McCarroll, Raytheon director for the Massachusetts Lowell Research Institute, "that's still a ways off."


The process may reduce costs associated with traditional manufacturing, such as machining of parts, so the company is pushing into additive manufacturing and 3-D printing, including projects meant to supplement traditional manufacturing processes. “There’s currently a hierarchy in our manufacturing. We make the structures, the housings, the circuit cards, with the right materials, and then we integrate them into a system,” says McCarroll. “What we see in the near future is printing the electronics and printing the structures, but still integrating. Eventually, we want to print everything together.  An integrated system.”


Thanks to high-end 3D Production Systems, Raytheon researchers have yet created nearly every component of a guided weapon using 3-D printing, including rocket engines, fins, parts for the guidance and control systems, and more. “You can design internal features that might be impossible to machine,” says Raytheon engineer Travis Mayberry, who is researching future uses of additive manufacturing and 3-D printing. “We’re trying new designs for thermal improvements and lightweight structures, things we couldn’t achieve with any other manufacturing method.”