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    UAMMI RECEIVES FEDERAL FUNDING TO MANUFACTURE 3D PRINTED PARTS FOR AIR FORCE

    UAMMI RECEIVES FEDERAL FUNDING TO MANUFACTURE 3D PRINTED PARTS FOR AIR FORCE

    The Utah Advanced Materials & Manufacturing Initiative (UAMMI, Kaysville, UT, US) announced on April 24 that it has been awarded nearly $1M in federal funds to produce carbon composite additive manufactured parts for the Air Force. This technology will give UAMMI the ability to 3D print carbon based replacement parts for legacy aircraft on demand — something often prohibitively expensive and time consuming using traditional technologies.

    UAMMI’s award constitutes a two-year project, and is set to begin in June 2018. The grant will come from the Air Force-driven MAMLS program (Maturation of Advanced Manufacturing for Low-Cost Sustainment), which was created in partnership with the Air Force Research Lab (AFRL, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, OH, US), National Center for Defense Manufacturing and Machining (NCDMM, Blairsville, PA, US) and America Makes (Youngstown, OH, US). 

    “Additive manufacturing represents a huge opportunity for Utah’s advanced manufacturing industry,” says Jeff Edwards, UAMMI Executive Director. “The carbon based components we will produce will be highly valuable to the Air Force as they will significantly reduce both the time and cost of aircraft repairs.”

    “These projects will have a tremendous impact on ensuring the strategic readiness of the US Air Force,” says America Makes executive director Rob Gorham. “The anticipated project outcomes will empower the sustainment community to adopt advanced additive manufacturing technologies, improving rapid part replacement/maintenance for legacy aircraft, enabling on-demand replacement of critically damaged or obsolete components, and reducing the cost and lead time to fabricate replacement components.” 

    As a non-profit initiative, UAMMI’s mission is to ensure that Utah is the global leader in value-added advanced materials, manufacturing, technology development, and design. Being awarded this funding will allow UAMMI to bring additive manufacturing, or 3D printing of carbon materials, to the forefront here in Utah, which is quickly becoming a major interest for many Utah advanced manufacturing companies.

    The goal of this project is to prove out and accelerate Composite-Based Additive Manufacturing (CBAM) technology and to build a body of CBAM knowledge for today’s non-critical part replacements. Non-critical parts of interest include electrical connectors, instrumentation knobs, wiring harnesses and small brackets. CBAM will also assess how other part families of similar size, shape, criticality and function can be manufactured.

    UAMMI’s additive manufacturing team will manufacture the legacy aircraft parts at the Utah Science Technology and Research Initiative (USTAR) Innovation Center (Salt Lake City, UT, US) using a state-of-the-art carbon-based 3D printer that will be provided by project partner Impossible Objects (Northbrook, IL, US). Testing of the parts will be conducted by additional project partners, the University of Utah’s Utah Composites Lab (Salt Lake City, UT, US) as well as the Ogden Air Logistics Complex (Hill Air Force Base, UT, US).

     The funding award was announced on April 24th by America Makes at the RAPID + TCT 2018 tradeshow, the world’s largest additive manufacturing industry event.  Six other award recipients were also announced as receiving funding to complete various phase 3 aspects of the program.

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    News & Image Source: UAMMI