This is not the greatest news for 3D printing, as it confirms the infeasibility of fully 3D printed rocketry, at least with ...
But one of the latest players to enter the commercial spaceflight industry, Relativity Space, thinks we can take the concept even farther. Not content to just 3D print rocket components ...
A pair of talented aerospace engineers, Tim Ellis and Jordan Noone, founded Relativity Space nine years ago with the intent of using 3D printing to manufacture rockets. They left jobs at Blue ...
Relativity Space, which last year launched into space the first rocket made with 3D printing, is in talks to raise money in a round that values the company at around $4.2 billion, flat with its last ...
California-based Relativity Space, which produced the rocket ... The company said its eventual goal was to have more than 95% of the rocket 3D printed. The items currently still being made ...
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According to Relativity, its 2-stage expendable rocket is the largest 3D-printed object which is 110 ft tall and 7.5 ft wide. The rocket has nine Aeon engines in its first stage and one Aeon Vac ...
Relativity Space's 3D-printed rocket, Terran 1, is set to launch on March 11. It will be the world's first 3D-printed rocket to go to space.
"I would rather make that decision than pathologically hold on to something." I did some CFD analysis on the Ariane PLF for a certain Swiss customer. These certainly seem to have the same geometry.
SpaceX rival Relativity Space has inked a deal with Intelsat, a storied communications satellite company started in the 1960s, to launch its satellites to space onboard a 3D-printed rocket that ...