3D Printing

Made In Space Preps to Send First Commercial 3D Printer to ISS

The first 3D printer in space wasinstalled at the International Space Station in November of 2014. After more than a year, isn’t it about time we send another? While taking on other important projects, such as the3D printing of large structures in spaceandthe airframefor theEnterprise In Spacespacecraft,Made In Spacehas been hard at work upgrading their Zero Gravity 3D printer to be even more powerful than their last. And, now, the space startup is ready to send it to the Space Station where, not only will it be able to 3D print parts for the crew aboard, but also commercial orders as well from customers down on Terra.

Image via NASA.
Image via NASA.

The launch of the Cygnus cargo ship, which will occur tomorrow Tuesday, March 22nd at 11:05 pm EST, will see the Made In SpaceAdditive Manufacturing Facility (AMF)head to the ISS, where it will begin 3D printing orders for over 20 customers already secured by Made In Space. Spencer Pitman, head of product strategy at Made in Space, explains toTechCrunchthat, among these orders, are medical research components, parts for satellites and other spacecraft, and even parts for high school projects and design contests. Pitman tellsTechCrunch, “We will even be printing a 3D printable exercise device for Autodesk and wrenches for Lowe’s.”And let’s not forgetthe 3D printed laughterthat will be floating out of the ISS hatch sometime this year.

made in space additive manufacturing facility lowe's 3D printer in space

The Additive Manufacturing Facility (AMF) isactually a Lowe’s-branded system, through Lowe’s Innovation Labs. Controlled remotely from Made In Space headquarters in the NASA Ames Research Park, the AMF has multi-material functionality, with Pitman saying that it can 3D print with 30 different materials. Made In Space President Andrew Rushmentioned in an Inside 3D Printing keynotelast year that this might even include the ability to 3D print low-temperature metals, though that has not yet been confirmed. Rush also suggested that the new machine was being designed to be upgradeable so that, in the future, it wouldn’t be necessary to send an entire system up to the ISS, but just the parts required to improve the old machine.

made in space 3D printed objects
Printed components from the original Zero-G printer.

现行汇率AMF订单之间的某个地方$6,000 and $30,000, according to Pitman, though educational orders receive discounts. While this may be an intimidating price point for your typical 3D Hubs order, it’s pretty reasonable when you consider that this is the first commercial 3D printing service in space.NASA statesthat it costs $10,000 to send a pound of payload in Earth orbit. This endeavor, along with Made In Space’s Archinaut project for 3D printing large-scale structures in space, is designed to enable manufacturing in space itself, to lighten the load for rockets on Earth. In addition to 3D printing parts for customers on Earth, however, the AMF could allow members of the ISS to replace and repair broken components, without the wait and cost associated with sending new items aboard a cargo ship.

If you’re looking to 3D print your own goodies aboard the ISS, Made In Space hasa “Print Request Form” that you can fill out here. At the moment, it sounds as though only polymers may be printed, but my fingers are crossed for metals in the future. Other relevant specs are listed below:

Print Volume 18cm long x 14 cm wide x 10cm tall
Material ABS, HDPE, PEI/PC
Resolution* 0.1 – 0.44 mm
Height Resolution Down to 75 micron layer height
Maximum Wall Thickness 1 mm
Overhangs Up to 3 inches
Threaded holes >M10

Stay tuned for the launch tomorrow! It’s going to be an important one. Not only will the ISS receive the first commercial 3D printer in space, but NASA will also be setting the Cygnus on fire! Not as part of a funeral for space vikings, but as a part ofthe Saffire experimentto study the way that fire spreads across a vehicle in space. You can learn a bit more about that in the video below: