Interview with Lockheed: “Orion Spacecraft Has 200 3D Printed Components”

In 2006, NASA selected Lockheed Martin to design, develop, and build Orion, set to embark on both manned and unmanned missions, it is the agency’s newest deep space exploration spaceship that will eventually carry astronauts from the Earth to the Moon, and back. As part of a plan to extend a sustained human presence beyond low Earth orbit (LEO), advance commerce and science in space, the Artemis program is the next step in human space exploration and a part of NASA’s broader Moon to Mars approach. In 2022, the Orion crew capsule is expected to take astronauts on a ride beyond LEO, to the Moon and back, and in five years it will transport the next people to a lunar orbital post.

NASA’s Orion spacecraft has been using additive manufacturing technologies exponentially. Lockheed Martin and NASA recently announced the completion of the Orion crew and service module being developed for the uncrewed Artemis I mission, which used 100 3D printed parts. While the spacecraft for the Artemis II mission has Lockheed developing close to 200 3D printed parts.

The Orion crew module for Exploration Mission 1 that will launch atop NASA’s Space Launch System rocket on its first uncrewed integrated flight (Image credit: NASA)

Last September, NASA, and Lockheed finalized a contract for the production and operations of six Orion spacecraft missions with an option to order up to 12 in total. The agency’s Orion Production and Operations Contract (OPOC) is an indefinite-delivery, indefinite-quantity (IDIQ) contract for NASA to issue both cost-plus-incentive-fee and firm-fixed-price orders. Initially, NASA has ordered three Orion spacecraft for Artemis missions III through V for $2.7 billion. Then in 2022, the agency plans to order three additional Orion spacecraft for Artemis missions VI through VIII for $1.9 billion. Up to six additional Orion spacecraft may be ordered under the IDIQ contract through 2030, leveraging spacecraft production cost data from the previous six missions to enable the lowest possible unit prices.

During an interview with Lockheed Martin Space’ specialists Brian Kaplun, Manager of the Additive Manufacturing Lab, and Colin Sipe, Orion Crew Systems Senior Manager, 3DPrint.com delved into the makings of America’s next spacecraft for a new generation of explorers.

How has additive manufacturing helped in the creation of more efficient spacecraft?

“One of the tenants of advanced manufacturing is to increase the cost and the schedule efficiency for any of our platforms, including Orion, and doing so in a way that, at the very least, maintains parity from a technical perspective but in many cases enhances that. So a lot of the work we’ve done with Orion was targeted to allow for a more efficiently reusable, cost-competitive and faster time to delivery spacecraft that will have a better technical performance. For example our docking hatch covers were printed in a cost and schedule effective manner; additionally, thanks to a new ESD compliant polymer (a type of no-static plastic) we provided more technical performance as well,” suggested Kaplun. “AM is one tool in the advance manufacturing toolbox that really allows us to hit all three of those valuable points. The plan is to continue creating AM components that we already utilized and look at increasing the number.”

While Colin Sipe explained that “we do a lot of parts that would be traditionally difficult to produce, such as structural components and brackets, different parts to channel airflow, or fuel containers, like hydrogen fuel tanks. Moreover, on the seats that the astronauts will use on Orion, we 3D printed different spacers (parts that go between the edge of the seat and the hip of the astronaut) and those come in various sizes based on the astronaut using it. We have to be able to accommodate from 1 to 99th percentile of the average American size individual.”

Do 3D printed parts withstand some of the harshest conditions in space?

“We fully qualify any of our spacecraft and platforms, and it is a qualification born of many years of doing this. On 2011 we launched the first-ever 3D printed part going to outer space on our Juno mission and right now those parts are orbiting the gas giant. So just as rigorous as we did in 2011, here in the last throes of 2019 we have to go through and really qualify any of the Orion parts. Even more so, with future manned missions, we are going to further stress those qualifications. Its a challenge that we are very experienced in and really believe we are up for,” claimed Kaplun. “Experience in any way, shape or form is going to be a competitive advantage for Lockheed.”

How do you choose the design for the 3D printed parts?

“We have produced many different parts for our customers that almost have an organic shape to them and so if you look at some of the new designs where you are optimizing for strength in terms of weight and producibility, you will observe that they mimic the bones in your arm like a very evolved and efficient method of support. If we look at some of the structural brackets that we have done, they almost have a tree or a skeletal structure look to them, that is a very unique mindset or would have been a unique mindset when we were looking at the substractive and traditional manufacturing. But now that people are being trained for AM, we notice that there are a lot more technically complex designs. Some of the ESD parts that we made for Orion would be virtually imposible ot make any other way,” revealed Kaplun. “Now, we are able to combine a large number of other parts into one piece and eliminate a lot of the fasteners and the weight that otherwise would have been a parasitic load, providing greater opportunities to put payloads and scienitic instruments onto our platforms.”

In what way does 3D printing drive down spacecraft costs?

“We try for a really ambitious cost reduction, aiming at 50%. Over the last year, we printed roughly 6,500 parts across our entire space division. Recently we even used AM technology to develop mockups for tests, such as the toilet that will be used on Orion, called the UWMS,” proposed Sipe. “We were concerned about one area of interference so we printed the entire mockup of the toilet and put it into the flight vehicle to verify that we could reach and access the bolts. The size of that toilet is probably two feet in diameter and three feet tall, so it was a very large piece to produce.”

How does Lockheed factor in sustainability when 3D printing its pieces?

Kaplun indicated that at Lockheed, engineers are “very proud of how sustainable our technology is. Our polymer builds can be recycled and reused if needed, the powder bed processes are extremely efficient and the industry as a whole is considered very sustainable and cost-efficient from a materials perspective. Some of the waste for our additive processes can be lower than five percent. When you compare that to some of the subtractive and traditional manufacturing applications, those numbers flip completely, producing 90% waste.” 

Would you be able to convey how many AM parts were used for Orion?

“We made 200 components for the Artemis II Orion spacecraft. While the Artemis I had over 100 printed pieces and the previous version had only four 3D printed parts. This reveals that only one spacecraft generation later, we were able to double the amount of 3D printed parts,” reported Sipe. 

A 3D printed titanium part for NASA’s Orion spacecraft (Image credit: Lockheed Martin)

What can we expect to see during the Artemis II mission scheduled for late 2020?

“Our next mission will launch Orion on a Space Launch System (SLS) rocket, which will be the largest rocket ever built as far as liftoff power. Next year we can expect an unmaned service module to travel to the lunar orbit where it will stay for a month, carry out significant checkouts of all of our modules and will be the first launch on the new rocket. Once it returns to Earth, we will recover it, take it apart, see what we can reuse, what we need to make some improvements on, and at the same time, we’ll be getting ready for our Artemis II mission, with the first astronauts flying on 2022. Then, Artemis III in 2024, will take astronauts to Gateway, a small space station in the lunar orbit, and from there to a human landing system that will put the first woman and next man on the Moon surface. This will be the first of many missions to the Moon’s south pole, where bases and moon mining will begin,” said Sipe.

Are there more engineers interested in AM technology applications?

According to Kaplun, there has been much interest in AM: “we are witnessing a lot of students and scholars contributing to the design space, coming into our engineering and production ranks with a lot of previous work in the field, with new ideas and new abilities to utilize the tools that we can now offer.” 

As an engineer, how do you change your mindset to produce something from a subtractive standpoint to an additive one?

“We are starting to corrupt the threshold as we are beginning to design parts that can only be made via the additive route, whereby in the past we would sort of take something that was designed for a normal conventional machine and then transition it to the additive world,” told Sipe. “Today we are generating designs that we know the only way they can be made is through AM. There are certain parts of the spacecraft that couldn’t be done with other technologies, such as hollow, organically grown on the printer parts that create new opportunities for us.” 

3D printed Orion docking hatch cover (Image credit: Lockheed Martin)

What 3D printing technologies are being used at Lockheed?

“We have a very large gamut of different types of technologies to make the 3D printed parts for Orion, the docking hedge covers were made on Stratasys FDM printers, but we also use a lot of metal powder bed technologies in various forms as well as different polymer technologies,” the experts proposed. 

3D printed Orion docking hatch cover made of PEKK thermoplastic (Image credit: Lockheed Martin)

So what lays ahead for the aerospace company?

“We just got into a long term production contract with NASA for the six upcoming spacecraft missions, so I believe it is our goal to make even more 3D printed parts for spacecraft. A big focus of the contract was to dramatically reduce per-vehicle costs and the major ways of doing that was by having reusable Orion crew modules and systems, using advanced manufacturing technologies, material and component bulk buys and an accelerated mission cadence. I consider that AM is a large part of reducing the cost and increasing the cadence of how often we fly,” enlightened Kaplun.

Both Kaplun and Sipe consider that the “Orion spacecraft is part of NASA’s backbone for deep space exploration.”

The completed Orion spacecraft crew module at the NASA Kennedy Space Center (Image credit: Lockheed Martin)

 

With work well underway on both the Artemis I and II rockets, with core stage assembly nearly complete at Michoud, Orion will leave Lockheed for testing at NASA’s Stennis Space Center near Bay St. Louis, in Mississippi.

Sipe concluded that: “In 1981, NASA wanted to move back into deep space so since 1981 we were flying the space shuttle, and physically could not go outside the Earth’s orbit, the Apollo was the last spacecraft that physically could leave the gravity of the Earth and move into deep space, and NASA had a desire for mankind to return. Orion is the only spacecraft development that is a true exploration class spacecraft. It’s not like any other, it has unique capabilities never before seen and even though the capsule is a heritage of the Apollo mission, its actually far superior.” 

The post Interview with Lockheed: “Orion Spacecraft Has 200 3D Printed Components” appeared first on 3DPrint.com | The Voice of 3D Printing / Additive Manufacturing.

284 Replies to “Interview with Lockheed: “Orion Spacecraft Has 200 3D Printed Components””

  1. Pingback: porn
  2. Pingback: Ignou Project
  3. Pingback: buy cialis online
  4. Pingback: Christianity
  5. Pingback: seo
  6. Pingback: sex porno indir
  7. Pingback: Cialis in usa
  8. Pingback: levitra pill
  9. Pingback: order levitra
  10. Pingback: buy cheap viagra
  11. Pingback: tadalafil citrate
  12. Pingback: cash advance
  13. Pingback: payday loans
  14. Pingback: raging bull online
  15. Pingback: viagra for sale
  16. Pingback: buy cialis
  17. Pingback: cialis internet
  18. Pingback: 20 cialis
  19. Pingback: DNS Tools
  20. Pingback: cialis buy
  21. Pingback: viagra discount
  22. Pingback: sildenafil 100
  23. Pingback: CBD Oil Capsules
  24. Pingback: viagra reviews
  25. Pingback: viagra buy
  26. Pingback: viagra canada
  27. Pingback: cheap viagra
  28. Pingback: viagra generic
  29. Pingback: viagra vs cialis
  30. Pingback: real casino online
  31. Pingback: casinos online
  32. Pingback: buy generic viagra
  33. Pingback: generic viagra
  34. Pingback: viagra for sale
  35. Pingback: cialis 20mg
  36. Pingback: ceclor pharmacy
  37. Pingback: celebrex price
  38. Pingback: celexa prices
  39. Pingback: cheapest cipro
  40. Pingback: casinos
  41. Pingback: slot machines
  42. Pingback: free slots online
  43. Pingback: insurance auto
  44. Pingback: buy cialis brand
  45. Pingback: payday loans nh
  46. Pingback: get payday loans
  47. Pingback: Generic viagra us
  48. Pingback: buy cbd oil online
  49. Pingback: essay buy
  50. Pingback: fake essay writer
  51. Pingback: the assignments
  52. Pingback: buying an essay
  53. Pingback: french homework
  54. Pingback: how to buy clomid
  55. Pingback: clozaril cheap
  56. Pingback: sildenafil viagra
  57. Pingback: Cialis or viagra
  58. Pingback: cost of combivent
  59. Pingback: cozaar medication
  60. Pingback: cheap crestor 5mg
  61. Pingback: diamox coupon
  62. Pingback: order etodolac
  63. Pingback: cost of flomax
  64. Pingback: buy cialis
  65. Pingback: hyzaar coupon
  66. Pingback: imitrex generic
  67. Pingback: imodium nz
  68. Pingback: find more info
  69. Pingback: imuran prices
  70. Pingback: indocin price
  71. Pingback: procardia cost
  72. Pingback: proscar 5mg prices
  73. Pingback: provigil usa
  74. Pingback: revatio purchase
  75. Pingback: risperdal cost
  76. Pingback: cheapest robaxin
  77. Pingback: cost of rogaine 5%
  78. Pingback: seroquel pharmacy
  79. Pingback: skelaxin uk
  80. Pingback: cheap vantin
  81. Pingback: voltaren 50 mg otc
  82. Pingback: zanaflex cheap
  83. Pingback: you can look here
  84. Pingback: zocor generic
  85. Pingback: zovirax uk
  86. Pingback: tadalafil uk
  87. Pingback: leflunomide cheap
  88. Pingback: buy donepezil
  89. Pingback: cheap clonidinemg
  90. Pingback: celecoxib otc
  91. Pingback: rosuvastatin pills
  92. Pingback: fluconazole tablet
  93. Pingback: buy cialis doctor
  94. Pingback: permethrin tablet
  95. Pingback: sumatriptan cheap
  96. Pingback: metoprolol nz
  97. Pingback: prednisolone 4 mg
  98. Pingback: clomid and acne
  99. Pingback: diflucan relief
  100. Pingback: metformin kidney
  101. Pingback: paxil vs lexapro
  102. Pingback: plaquenil coupon
  103. Pingback: buy cialis rush
  104. Pingback: Zakhar Berkut hd
  105. Pingback: 4569987
  106. Pingback: buy 36 hour online
  107. Pingback: news news news
  108. Pingback: psy
  109. Pingback: psy2022
  110. Pingback: projectio freid
  111. Pingback: kinoteatrzarya.ru
  112. Pingback: topvideos
  113. Pingback: video
  114. Pingback: site
  115. Pingback: top

Comments are closed.