Relativity Space Make Rockets

Stargate 3D printer could help Relativity Space Make Rockets

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A new startup known as relativity space founded by 2 aerospace engineers needs to use huge 3D printers to produce rockets without humans needed on the factory floor, with the ultimate aim of driving the price of rocket launches down from their current rate of around $100 million to just about $10 million per launch. Bloomberg reports that Relativity’s founders think using 3D printing during this method in rocket production is “inevitable” – they simply want to be the ones to get it here 1st.

The company’s innovation isn’t coming up with the concept of 3D printing rocket components and even whole engines, the process is slow and expensive vs. traditional welding. but relativity went to the root of the problem by building its own 3D printers from scratch, using giant, robotic arms the tare nearly twenty feet tall which will produce a large rocket-sized fuel tank in just a few days, and an engine in only 1.5 weeks. Building a whole rocket should only take less than a month if the startup’s process works as planned, compared to multiple months for Curren human-driven processes.

 

What makes relativity capable of doing this? Well, the founder’s histories help. Co-founders Tim Ellis and Jordan Noone worked at Blue Origin and SpaceX respectively, and realized that the vast majority of their production prices was still labor, despite the efforts by each firms to decrease the price of launches considerably vs. what companies just like the United Launch Alliance were charging.

 

The startup is still very young and has only fourteen full-time workers on board, but it’s hoping to print a ninety foot rocket with 2,000 pounds of carrying capacity by around the mille of the 2020s, with a first flight of a prototype hopefully going in 2021.

 

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source:techcrunch.com

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