“What’s in the box? What’s in the box?”
– Brad Pitt as David Mills from the movie Se7en (1995)
But thankfully, the NASA unpacking process is nowhere near as goofy, or schadenfreude-filled, as watching very sad people unbox overhyped stuff on YouTube.
The project on the ISS is meant to demonstrate how additive manufacturing can be used to make parts and tools in space, and resupply and provide logistical support for explorations of Mars or even asteroids.
From the moment ISS Commander Barry “Butch” Wilmore installed the printer as part of the ISS Microgravity Science Glovebox late last year, with his famous “emailed” wrench that you could print at home, the crew has manufactured other items in addition to that wrench. While these items were sent back as part of a resupply mission, the printer itself is still aboard the station for use throughout the coming year.
NASA says the ISS provides “a one-of-a-kind laboratory for demonstrating additive manufacturing in the microgravity environment.” The 3D printer even has its own Twitter account.
The project has thus far resulted in the 25 different items (from a total of 14 different designs) including the wrench and some calibration coupons. They were boxed up and made their way back to Earth on the SpaceX Dragon in February, and they were then delivered to Alabama for testing.
NASA worked on the project with Made In Space, the California company that is also building an Additive Manufacturing Facility which features a next-generation printer for installation on the station. Made In Space says the printer will be available for use by commercial and government groups through the Center for the Advancement of Science In Space, or CASIS.
If you for one moment think NASA isn’t taking the project seriously, you can watch as Quincy Bean unboxes the “special cargo,” seen in the video below. Bean is the principal investigator for the space station printer, and to his credit, he manages to restrain himself as he removes and inspects those first items made in space with the 3D printer. Bean says that to protect the parts, they’ll remain sealed in bags until they can be tested.
What useful items can you see being 3D printed in space? Let us know in the What’s In the Box forum thread on 3DPB.com. Check out NASA’s unboxing video below.