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HADDY partners with Red Cat Holdings to integrate robotic additive manufacturing systems at the Blue Ops production facility in Valdosta, Georgia.
Partnership
2 min read

HADDY partners with Red Cat Holdings to integrate robotic additive manufacturing systems at the Blue Ops production facility in Valdosta, Georgia.

Haddy
Haddy

Hardware

Originally reported by 3DPrint.com

HADDY partners with Red Cat Holdings to integrate robotic additive manufacturing systems at the Blue Ops production facility in Valdosta, Georgia. The partnership involves the deployment of HADDY's large-format robotic extrusion systems, which are enhanced with Agentic AI to optimize production workflows for unmanned surface vehicles. Red Cat reports that this integration will double the existing manufacturing capacity for its maritime drone boats, enabling faster iteration cycles and on-demand fulfillment. HADDY will provide both the hardware installation at the Blue Ops site and the option to scale production through its own contract manufacturing network.

This partnership highlights the increasing reliance on robotic arm-based extrusion for large-scale maritime defense components, a sector where traditional molding or subtractive methods often struggle with lead times and design flexibility. By incorporating Agentic AI, HADDY addresses the critical need for autonomous process monitoring and real-time correction in large-format printing, which is essential for maintaining structural integrity in marine environments. This move positions both companies within the growing market for decentralized, rapid-response defense manufacturing, directly competing with traditional aerospace and maritime suppliers that are slower to adopt agile, software-defined production workflows.

For Red Cat, the success of this deployment depends on the reliability of the Agentic AI to manage print parameters without constant human oversight during long-duration builds. Buyers and stakeholders should focus on the verifiable reduction in lead times for hull components and the consistency of the printed parts under operational stress. The transition to robotic AM in defense manufacturing is now a matter of throughput capacity rather than just prototyping capability.

Topics

HADDYRed Cat Holdingsrobotic additive manufacturinglarge-format 3D printingmaritime defenseAgentic AIunmanned surface vehiclesGeorgia

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