SPEE3D’s CSAM Prints Metal Parts in Sub-Zero Environments

By on December 25th, 2024 in news, printer

Tags: , , , , ,

XSPEED undergoing cold weather testing [Source: VoxelMatters / SPEE3D]

As proven during the Office of The Secretary of Defense Manufacturing Technology’s Point of Need Challenge (PON).

SPEE3D, an Australian metal additive manufacturing company, has reported that their XSPEE3D system can successfully operate in a sub-zero environment and produce parts with comparable material properties to the same parts produced in a laboratory environment.

SPEE3D was selected to participate in developing, demonstrating, and testing their Cold Spray Metal Additive Manufacturing (CSAM) equipment, along with partners from the New Jersey Institute of Technology (NJIT) COMET Project and Philips Federal, as part of the Office of The Secretary of Defense Manufacturing Technology’s Point of Need Challenge (PON).

The PON project was managed by LIFT, the Detroit-based Department of Defense Manufacturing Innovation Institute, and it concluded that the XSPEE3D system is well-suited to support the DoD’s goal of expanding expeditionary manufacturing capabilities in extreme cold weather environments for battle damage repair and large metal component production.

“The positive results of the Point of Need Challenge demonstrate that the XSPEE3D can print metal parts from anywhere – and in any weather conditions – with the same successful outcomes,” said Byron Kennedy, CEO of SPEE3D. “Previously, we partnered with the Australian Army and showed that our technology can print parts in the extremely hot, rugged Australian bush. Now, we’re proving that we can also successfully print parts in the coldest of environments, helping to support the DoD’s goal of expanding manufacturing capabilities in austere environments.”

XSPEED undergoing cold weather testing [Source: VoxelMatters / SPEE3D]

The US Army’s Cold Region’s Research and Engineering Laboratory (CRREL) hosted the PON challenge in Hanover, New Hampshire in late 2023. The program showcased technologies that will keep service members combat-effective in extreme temperatures and exhibited systems that can be deployed in a cold-weather environment. These systems close supply chain gaps and enable warfighters to manufacture and use critical equipment on demand in the harshest environments.

Read the rest of this story at VoxelMatters

By Kerry Stevenson

Kerry Stevenson, aka "General Fabb" has written over 8,000 stories on 3D printing at Fabbaloo since he launched the venture in 2007, with an intention to promote and grow the incredible technology of 3D printing across the world. So far, it seems to be working!