Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta UK. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta UK. Mostrar todas las entradas

martes, 31 de octubre de 2017

GKN Driveline expands deployment of 3D Printing solutions


‘As we continue to design parts specifically for additive manufacturing, we are finding more and more applications that are delivering value. In the future, I believe that FDM 3D printing will become an integral part of our entire tool development cycle and help us further improve business performance.’ says Carlo Cavallini, GKN lead process engineer.

GKN Driveline —an UK-based, multi-national driveline components supplier and division of global engineering company GKN is expanding deployment of Stratasys 3D printing solutions at its plant in Florence, Italy, thus replacing several traditional manufacturing processes. GKN Driveline serves over 90 percent of automotive manufacturers globally, including the Fiat Chrysler Automobiles Group as well as Ferrari and Maserati. Customer lead times are continuing to shorten and the plant in Florence identified several applications that 3D printing could be used for, facilitating an overall increase in productivity.

‘The ability to quickly 3D print tools and parts that are customized to a specific production need gives us a new level of flexibility and significantly reduces our supply chain,’ adds Cavallini, also team leader at the plant. ‘Considering that we produce several thousand, individual parts a week, this ability to manufacture on-demand is crucial to ensuring our production line is always operational and maintains business continuity.' The plant’s factory floor team is using the Fortus 450mc to produce complex assembly tools for the production line in almost 70 percent less time than it takes using traditional methods. This, in turn, has enabled the team to undertake feasibility analyses of the tools and start using them more quickly, therefore accelerating the overall production schedule.

The team also managed to print a bespoke end-of-arm tool that moves individual components from one point of the assembly line to the next. It is made from ULTEM 9085 high-performance 3D printing material and can therefore endure prolonged use, said to equal that of a like-for-like metal component. A number of 3D printed end-of-arm tools are now in use across production, significantly reducing production downtime. 3D printing is also being used to produce customized, on-demand replacement parts for manufacturing equipment. For instance, the team recently printed a missing cable bracket for a robot, saving a week on the time it would have taken for a supplier to deliver it and consequently accelerating the delivery of parts to customers.

sábado, 10 de junio de 2017

Global Defense Robotics Industry 2017 Market Research


Global Defense Robotics Industry 2017 Market Research Report is a professional and in-depth research report on the world’s major regional market conditions of the Defense Robotics industry, focusing on the main regions and the main countries (United States, Europe, Japan and China).

The report introduces Defense Robotics basic information, including definition, classification, application, industry chain structure, industry overview, policy analysis, and news analysis, etc. Key Manufacturers profiled in this research are Honeywell Aerospace (US), BAE Systems Plc. (UK), iRobot Corporation (US), Thales SA (France), QinetiQ Group Plc (UK), QinetiQ North America, Inc. (US), AAI Corporation (US), Allen-Vanguard Corporation (Canada), Cassidian (Germany), Cobham Plc. (UK), General Atomics Aeronautical Systems Inc. (US), Northrop Grumman Corporation (US), The Boeing Company (US) and Ultra Electronics (UK).

Complete report on the Defense Robotics Market Research Report spread across 119 pages, profiling 14 companies and supported with 125 tables and figures is now available at:

martes, 29 de marzo de 2016

UK outlines extent of Reaper UAV strikes


The UK revealed on 21 March the extent of airstrikes being conducted against the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria by Royal Air Force (RAF) General Atomics Aeronautical Systems Inc (GA-ASI) MQ-9 Reaper unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs). (Read more)

domingo, 27 de septiembre de 2015

General Atomics: New maritime capabilities


General Atomics Aeronautical Systems has introduced a new sonobuoy capability for its MQ-9 Guardian maritime UAV which, alongside a number of other developing technologies, could make it a contender to help fill the UK’s maritime patrol gap.



While a requirement for a Maritime Patrol Aircraft (MPA) acquisition has yet to be released from the UK government, the developments that General Atomics is incorporating into the MQ-9 suggests that it will look to offer a modified Guardian to complement a manned MPA that is expected to be procured.



Other technology developments that the company is advancing include extended-range wings with external fuel tanks – something that has just been fielded with the US Air Force for the first time. The Guardian has a 1,000nm (1,850km) range and can stay on station for a further 10h, while the extended range variant has a 1,900nm range plus 10h on station.



Meanwhile, the company is developing a certifiable variant of the MQ-9 that will be able to fly in national airspace. This includes integration of the company’s detect and avoid Due Regard Radar system – for which it has been working with NASA and the US Federal Aviation Administration – into a modified MQ-9 nose, plus de-icing, lightning protection and a composite make-up similar to that on a Boeing 787.



A prototype of the detect and avoid system has just completed the third round of testing with NASA’s MQ-9-based Ikhana UAV, and testing using a certifiable system is expected to take place next year and be ready for certification in 2017.

lunes, 12 de enero de 2015

Un UAV del Ejercito Británico estuvo a poco de abatir a un helicóptero de la RAF


El Ejército Británico estuvo a punto de abatir un helicóptero de la RAF (Royal Air Force) cargado de soldados, cuando uno de sus propios UAVs realizaba maniobras a menos de 18 metros del aparato.


El incidente, que involucró a un helicóptero Agusta Westland AW101 "Merlin" y a un UAV Lockheed Martin "Desert Hawk", ocurrió durante el pasado mes de Julio, en el espacio aereo del campo de entrenamiento militar de Stanford (Norfolk, UK) que, entre otras particularidades, alberga la réplica de un pueblo típico de Afganistán.



David del Fresno Consultores
Asesoría en Impresión 3D y Manufactura Aditiva