General Electric to Expand 3D Printing Manufacturing – Invests $100 million

IMTS

Share this Article

Every day we hear more news about the 3D printing industry’s growth.  Today we got word that General Electric’s Oil and Gas Division will begin using metal laser sintering technology to 3D print fuel nozzles for Gas turbines sometime in the second half of this year.  Initially the program will begin as a pilot project, and progress to full production by next year.    

The technology that General Electric plans to use for this production process originates from an acquisition they had back in November of 2012 of Morris Technologies, a firm employing 130 people in Cincinnati Ohio.  Over the last 15 months GE has continued to improve upon the technology, and has been using it to produce 3D printed fuel nozzles for their Leap engines.  The nozzles will be more durable and lighter than traditionally manufactured nozzles.

General Electric’s Oil and Gas Division plans to spend over $100 million in the next two years alone on technology development, of which a “significant portion,” will be utilized for 3D printing technologies.  They hope to grow both the scope and scale of production with 3D printing techniques.  Eric Gebhardt, Chief Technology Officer and Vice President, Engineering at GE Oil & Gas, said the following,

“Now we’re going to have to see how large they can get over time,   Will it follow Moore’s law where it is going to double in size every 18 months? That’s kind of what we’re seeing right now. But when is it going to reach a natural inflection point? That’s something we have to work through.”

It will be interesting to see if the competition follows suit on adopting 3D Printing manufacturing processes as quickly and as expansive as GE has.

Discuss this Article: https://3dprintboard.com/showthread.php?1316-General-Electric-Expands-3D-Printing-Plans

Share this Article


Recent News

World’s Largest Polymer 3D Printer Unveiled by UMaine: Houses, Tools, Boats to Come

Changing the Landscape: 1Print Co-Founder Adam Friedman on His Unique Approach to 3D Printed Construction



Categories

3D Design

3D Printed Art

3D Printed Food

3D Printed Guns


You May Also Like

Featured

Profiling a Construction 3D Printing Pioneer: US Army Corps of Engineers’ Megan Kreiger

The world of construction 3D printing is still so new that the true experts can probably be counted on two hands. Among them is Megan Kreiger, Portfolio Manager of Additive...

Featured

US Army Corps of Engineers Taps Lincoln Electric & Eaton for Largest 3D Printed US Civil Works Part

The Soo Locks sit on the US-Canadian border, enabling maritime travel between Lake Superior and Lake Huron, from which ships can reach the rest of the Great Lakes. Crafts carrying...

Construction 3D Printing CEO Reflects on Being Female in Construction

Natalie Wadley, CEO of ChangeMaker3D, could hear the words of her daughter sitting next to her resounding in her head. “Mum, MUM, you’ve won!” Wadley had just won the prestigious...

1Print to Commercialize 3D Printed Coastal Resilience Solutions

1Print, a company that specializes in deploying additive construction (AC) for infrastructure projects, has entered an agreement with the University of Miami (UM) to accelerate commercialization of the SEAHIVE shoreline...