Space News
space history and artifacts articles

Messages
space history discussion forums

Sightings
worldwide astronaut appearances

Resources
selected space history documents

Forum:Space Shuttles - Space Station
Topic:[ISS] Made in Space, Inc. zero-gravity 3D printer
Want to register?
Who Can Post? Any registered users may post a reply.
About Registration You must be registered in order to post a topic or reply in this forum.
Your UserName:
Your Password:   Forget your password?
Your Reply:


*HTML is ON
*UBB Code is ON

Smilies Legend

Options Disable Smilies in This Post.
Show Signature: include your profile signature. Only registered users may have signatures.
*If HTML and/or UBB Code are enabled, this means you can use HTML and/or UBB Code in your message.

If you have previously registered, but forgotten your password, click here.

Wilmore installed the printer in the station's Microgravity Science Glovebox and started the printer, which extruded plastic to form the first of a series of calibration coupons, a small plastic sample about the size of a postage stamp. After calibration of the printer is complete and verified, the printer will make the first NASA-designed 3-D printed object in space. The goal of the 3-D Printing in Zero-G Technology Demonstration on the space station is to show that additive manufacturing can make a variety of parts and tools in space. The 3-D printer heats a relatively low-temperature plastic filament to build parts layer on top of layer in designs supplied to the machine.

Before the printer left Earth in September 2014 on SpaceX's fourth commercial cargo resupply mission, engineers loaded the first files to be printed. These initial parts -- primarily test coupons -- will be returned to Earth for detailed analysis and comparison to identical ground control samples made earlier this year prior to launch with the same printer while it was at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama.

"The goal of the first phase of printing is to verify that the 3-D printing process works the same in microgravity as it does on the ground," said Niki Werkheiser, NASA's 3-D printer project manager at Marshall. "Once we confirm that the process works, we will move to the second phase of printing which focuses more on the design and utilization of the parts we print, which will ultimately lead to establishing an on-demand machine shop in space."

NASA contracted Made In Space, Inc. at NASA's Ames Research Center in Moffett Field, California, to design and build the printer. Going forward, Made In Space engineers will use NASA-provided software and work with controllers at NASA's Payload Operations Integration Center (POIC) in Huntsville to send commands directly to the printer from the ground. As the first objects are printed, NASA and Made In Space engineers will monitor printing via downlinked images and videos. The majority of the printing process is controlled from the ground to limit crew time required for operations.

"We're approaching the most exciting moment of this experiment after years of intensive work, which dates back to Made In Space's first microgravity testing with NASA's Flight Opportunities Program in 2011," said Aaron Kemmer, CEO of Made In Space, Inc. "Our team is on standby to send the command to print the first object in space. We are taking everything we are learning on the space station and using it to design an even more elaborate 3-D printer, which will be available for anyone to use."

That printer is scheduled to be launched to the station next year and will be available to meet manufacturing needs of both NASA and commercial users.

NASA invited students to propose what they would print in space as part of a Future Engineers competition. Students can create and submit a digital 3-D model of a tool they think astronauts need in space. The winning student will watch from the POIC alongside the operations control team as their design is printed in space. The deadline for entry is Dec. 15.

Robert PearlmancollectSPACE
Space station's 3D printer makes first part

The International Space Station, as its name implies, was assembled from parts that were made around the world. For the first time in its history however, the orbiting outpost has gained a part like no other.

It was made in space.

At 4:28 p.m. EST (0928 GMT) Monday (Nov. 24), the first 3D printer designed to be operated in space successfully manufactured its first part on board the space station. The print marked the first time hardware has been additively produced off-planet, rather than launching it from Earth.

The history-making part was the faceplate for the printer's own extruder printhead. Leaving absolutely no question of where it was made, or who made it, the faceplate included its own "Made In Space" label.

sts205cdrArgh! Not the Wurm logo! Didn't they get the memo?!
OV-105Somewhere Dan Goldin is having a fit right now.
mikej
quote:
Originally posted by sts205cdr:
Argh! Not the Wurm logo!
That was my first thought, too!
Robert PearlmanThe meatball is a much more complex logo to print, and besides the worm is making a comeback! A number of the new exploration tools and vehicles being designed and tested at Johnson Space Center include the worm on ID plates.
sts205cdrIf they have to resort to printing the Wurm because it's not complicated, they don't have much of a chance with this device.

The return of the Wurm? Where is the NO desk?!

Robert PearlmanThis was the first print using a device that itself is an experiment. The second printer, which this unit will inform, will be what what government and commercial customers can use.

But besides all that, the worm has its own appeal to the post-Apollo generation. Maybe you haven't noticed our logo?

tegwilymNow we just wait and see who in our collector community gets the first "space printed" artifact in their collection.

I'm sure Robert will beat us all to it.

Robert PearlmanI think it's going to be some time before a 3D printed artifact from space ends up in private hands — though Made In Space did say they were sending me something in the mail recently...

In the meantime, here's video of the faceplate being printed in space:

Robert PearlmanMade In Space's 3D printer was used today (Dec. 16) to print a ratchet:

Robert PearlmancollectSPACE
How to 3D print a space station wrench as emailed to orbit

The first-ever hand tool to be emailed up to the International Space Station can now be downloaded to anywhere on Earth.

NASA and Made In Space, Inc., which partnered to install the first zero-g 3D printer onboard the orbiting laboratory, have released the file used to 3D print a ratcheting socket wrench on the space station earlier this month. The 4.5-inch-long (11.4 centimeter) tool was not the first 3D object to be printed off the planet but it made history as the first part to be transmitted to space for manufacture.

Win a 3D printed space station ratchet! Click through to article for details.

Cozmosis22That little ratchet wrench is interesting but like Legos it is a toy not a tool?
Robert PearlmanIt is a functioning tool with moving parts but more than that it is a test of the Made In Space 3D printer. During phase two of the print tests (starting early next year), MIS and NASA will be seeking to replicate tools already in use in space.
cfreeze79So who won the tool?
Robert PearlmanApologies, I meant to post it here on Friday. As announced on Twitter:
Congratulations to @nicholasilopez, winner of our #WinASpaceRatchet contest!

And special thanks to @3DSolidSolution for providing the 3D prints for our article and #WinASpaceRatchet contest!

Robert PearlmanMade In Space has provided an update on the status of their 3D printer on the space station.
The world's first Zero-Gravity 3D Printer has completed its initial task. Fourteen unique objects have now been additively manufactured on the International Space Station as part of the "3D Printing in Zero-Gravity Technology Demonstration."
Robert Pearlman
quote:
Originally posted by tegwilym:
Now we just wait and see who in our collector community gets the first "space printed" artifact in their collection.
I'd love to say this was printed in space, but it's the next best thing...
Our friends at Made In Space, the company behind the International Space Station's Zero-G 3D printer, surprised us with this 3D printed version of the collectSPACE logo.
Robert PearlmanNASA Marshall Space Flight Center video release
NASA Unboxes Delivery from Space Station

Watch the unboxing of some special cargo from the International Space Station as Quincy Bean, the principal investigator for the space station printer, removes and inspects the first items made in space with a 3D printer.

To protect the space-manufactured items, they must remain in bags until inspection is complete and testing begins at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama. More than 20 parts were "unboxed" on April 6, 2015, at Marshall's Additive Manufacturing Laboratory.

Additive manufacturing has the potential to change the way we resupply the space station and will be critical for deep space missions to Mars, asteroids and other places.

Robert PearlmancollectSPACE
Made In Space launches 'space-grade' 3D printing material for sale

They made 3D printing in space possible. They made the files used to 3D print in space available. Now, they're making the material used to 3D print in space for sale.

Made In Space, Inc., the California-based startup behind the zero-g 3D printer used by NASA astronauts aboard the International Space Station, announced on Thursday (April 16) they have begun to service terrestrial-based markets by offering the same "space-grade" plastic feedstock used in the first additive manufacturing demonstration in space.

"We selected our material after testing dozens of different vendors and have determined it to be some of the highest quality available," Matthew Napoli, Made In Space director of in space manufacturing, said in a statement.

Contact Us | The Source for Space History & Artifacts

Copyright 1999-2024 collectSPACE. All rights reserved.





advertisement