Skip to main content
CAS Space has successfully validated laser wire-feed metal additive manufacturing during a recent suborbital flight test.
Technology
1 min read

CAS Space has successfully validated laser wire-feed metal additive manufacturing during a recent suborbital flight test.

Originally reported by 南极熊

CAS Space has successfully validated laser wire-feed metal additive manufacturing during a recent suborbital flight test. The payload confirmed that wire-DED processes maintain melt pool stability under microgravity without the containment risks associated with powder systems. This capability enables on-orbit fabrication and repair of large structural components, potentially slashing deep-space logistics costs by over 50%. We are moving toward a future where missions launch raw materials rather than bulky spares. 🚀🛰️ #3DPrinting #SpaceTech #AdditiveManufacturing #Aerospace #CASSpace

How This Connects

6 related events
  1. Same pattern

    Caracol has reached TRL 3 after a nine-month project with the European Space Agency, advancing autonomous robotic 3D printing in orbit.

  2. Same pattern

    Titomic Limited signed a Space Act Agreement with NASA to evaluate parts made via its cold spray technology.

  3. Same pattern

    Machina Labs raised 124 million USD to scale a 200,000-square-foot Intelligent Factory featuring 50 RoboCraftsman cells.

  4. Same pattern

    Airbus is scaling w-DED to produce structural titanium parts up to 7 meters long using a designed-for-DED approach.

  5. Same pattern

    CAS Space has validated laser wire additive manufacturing (LWAM) technology during the successful suborbital flight of the LiHong-1 rocket.

  6. This article

    CAS Space has successfully validated laser wire-feed metal additive manufacturing during a recent suborbital flight test.

  7. Same pattern

    Yuding Additive secured hundreds of millions of RMB in Pre-IPO financing to expand production of large metal components.