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Thursday, December 5, 2013

General Electric Building Plane Parts With 3D Printing



General Electric, on the hunt for ways to build more than 85,000 fuel nozzles for its new Leap jet engines, is making a big investment in 3D printing. Usually the nozzles are assembled from 20 different parts. Also known as additive manufacturing, 3D printing can create the units in one metal piece, through a successive layering of materials. The process is more efficient and can be used to create designs that can’t be made using traditional techniques, GE says. The finished product is stronger and lighter than those made on the assembly line and can withstand the extreme temperatures (up to 2,400F) inside an engine. There’s just one problem: Today’s industrial 3D printers don’t have enough capacity to handle GE’s production needs, which require faster, higher-quality output at a lower cost.
Courtesy GE AviationEach Leap engine will contain 19 metal 3D-printed fuel nozzles. The part is lighter and more durable than traditional parts

“With today’s technology, it would take too many machines,” as many as 60 to 70, to efficiently make the nozzles, says Greg Morris, business development leader for additive manufacturing at GE Aviation. Morris joined the aerospace company last year, as part of GE’s acquisition of his 3D company, Morris Technologies. “We can start ramping up with the current generation of technology, but within two to three years we’re going to have to be onto the next generation to meet our cost targets,” he says. So GE is waiting for development of new printers with three to four times the capacity.

As part of a $3.5 billion investment in its aerospace supply chain, GE says it will spend tens of millions of dollars to invest in new technology and, over the next five years, triple the size of its 70-person 3D-printing staff and expand its factory floor fourfold. (The 85,000 nozzles are for engine orders that will enter full production in late 2015.)


The company’s embrace of 3D printing throws the weight of the world’s largest jet-engine maker behind a process invented in the 1980s to fabricate scale models. As the technology has advanced, 3D printing has evolved. Today, Boeing uses the process to make plastic air-conditioning ducts for its 787 Dreamliner jet, and Nike has a football cleat made on 3D printers. “[GE’s] investment changes everything, and it’s also unprecedented,” says Terry Wohlers, president of 3D printing consulting company Wohlers Associates. The company’s annual report tracking 3D technology estimates that the industry is poised to almost triple, to about $6 billion in sales, by 2017.


source: Business Week
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Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Beyonce Is Most Searched Celebrity Of 2013 In USA

Despite the tabloid frenzy caused by her pregnancy, divorce and engagement to Kanye West this year, reality TV megastar Kim Kardashian fell short of being crowned 2013’s most searched celebrity in America. Instead the title went to BeyoncĂ©, according to the annual report released by Bing on Monday.

As second most searched, Kim beat out Rihanna, Taylor Swift and Madonna, who came in third, fourth, and fifth place, respectively.



 
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Monday, December 2, 2013

Amazon To Start Making Deliveries Using Drones

In the not-too-distant future, Amazon deliveries could come by air directly to your doorstep.

The online mega-retailer unveiled plans on Sunday for a new delivery service called Prime Air, which uses unmanned aerial vehicles -- or drones -- that look like toy helicopters.
The "octocopters" aren't ready to take flight yet. Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos said in an interview that the drones would be ready to take flight in four to five years. But an Amazon spokesperson pointed to an updated post on the company's website promising aerial deliveries as soon as governing rules change.
 The type of flights Bezos proposed are currently not allowed. Unlike some other drones currently used, these would be autonomous -- they would fly without a pilot.
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