Google – AFP, 5 January 201
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A designer
looks at a 3D printer during an exhibition in London on April 23,
2013
(AFP/File, Adrian Dennis)
|
London — A
Tornado fighter jet fitted with metal components created on a 3D printer
undertook a successful test flight in Britain last month, defence company BAE
Systems said Sunday.
The plane
was equipped with a 3D-printed protective cover for the cockpit radio, a
protective guard in the landing gear and support struts on the air intake door,
the British firm said.
The
announcement follows NASA's successful test of a 3D-printed rocket engine
component in August last year, as aerospace companies seek cheaper and quicker
ways to manufacture engineering parts.
"You
are suddenly not fixed in terms of where you have to manufacture these
things," said Mike Murray, Head of Airframe Integration at BAE Systems,
announcing the successful test flight at the firm's airfield in Warton,
northwest England.
"You
can manufacture the products and whatever base you want, providing you can get
a machine there, which means you can also start to support other platforms such
as ships and aircraft carriers.
"And
if it's feasible to get machines out on the front line, it also gives improved
capability where we wouldn't traditionally have any manufacturing
support."
BAE said
some of the parts -- produced at a Royal Air Force base in eastern England --
cost less than £100 ($165, 120 euros) to manufacture, and had the potential to
save hundreds of thousands of pounds every year, without giving details.

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