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First Titanium 3D-printed Part Installed into Serial Production Aircraft

sustainable aviation

Airbus to equip A350 XWB pylon with bracket

 
Toulouse, September 13, 2017: Airbus completed for the first time the installation of a titanium 3D-printed bracket on an in-series production A350 XWB. The bracket, built using additive-layer manufacturing (ALM) technologies (also known as 3D-printing), is part of the aircraft pylon, the junction section between wings and engines.
Additive-layer manufacturing “grows” products from a fine base material powder – such as aluminum, titanium, stainless steel and plastics – by adding thin layers of material in incremental stages, which enables complex components to be produced directly from computer-aided design (CAD) information.
3D-printed parts are already flying on some of Airbus A320neo and A350 XWB test aircraft. These include metal printed cabin brackets and bleed pipes.
Among the major benefits of 3D-printed parts are weight savings, lower costs and improved manufacturing methods.
sustainable aviation

Source: Airbus