Skip to main content
Ronsu Technology is debuting its VEAM ultra-coaxial laser wire-fed metal 3D printing technology at TCT Asia, utilizing a 6-laser symmetrical layout to optimize deposition stability.
Technology
1 min read

Ronsu Technology is debuting its VEAM ultra-coaxial laser wire-fed metal 3D printing technology at TCT Asia, utilizing a 6-laser symmetrical layout to optimize deposition stability.

Originally reported by 南极熊

Ronsu Technology is debuting its VEAM ultra-coaxial laser wire-fed metal 3D printing technology at TCT Asia, utilizing a 6-laser symmetrical layout to optimize deposition stability. This system achieves near 100 percent material utilization while removing directional constraints common in wire-fed DED processes. By merging laser precision with wire efficiency, the solution reduces post-processing for large aerospace parts. This signals a shift toward high-fidelity, industrial-scale metal manufacturing. 🚀

How This Connects

6 related events
  1. Same pattern

    GKN Aerospace and the U.S.

  2. Same pattern

    Norsk Titanium receives Safran Innovation Award for aerospace additive manufacturing

  3. Same pattern

    The University of Utah, Penn State, and Elementum 3D have secured a NASA STTR Phase I grant to investigate the cold spray additive manufacturing of GRX-810, an oxide dispersion-strengthened alloy.

  4. This article

    Ronsu Technology is debuting its VEAM ultra-coaxial laser wire-fed metal 3D printing technology at TCT Asia, utilizing a 6-laser symmetrical layout to optimize deposition stability.

  5. Same pattern

    Airbus and Norsk Titanium are moving to process-based qualification by installing a Merke IV RPD machine at the Varel factory.

  6. Same pattern

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

  7. Same pattern

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