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US Navy tests 3D-printed fighter jet parts to halve repair times

The U.S. Navy is testing 3D-printed composite parts for its F/A-18 Super Hornets to significantly reduce repair times. This initiative aims to enable forward-deployed maintenance sites to produce necessary parts on-demand, cutting repair durations by approximately 50% and enhancing operational readiness. The technology allows for the direct printing and application of composite patches, bypassing lengthy traditional supply chains. Other military branches are also exploring 3D printing for various applications, including drone production and specialized vehicle manufacturing. AI

IMPACT This initiative could streamline military logistics and maintenance, potentially reducing aircraft downtime and increasing operational readiness.

RANK_REASON This is a test of a new manufacturing technique for military hardware, not a core AI release or significant industry move.

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AI-generated summary · Google Gemini · from 2 sources. How we write summaries →

US Navy tests 3D-printed fighter jet parts to halve repair times

COVERAGE [2]

  1. Tom's Hardware TIER_1 English(EN) · Jowi Morales ·

    US Navy is flight-testing 3D printed fighter jet parts that cut repair times in half — forward-deployed 3D printers generate composite parts, flight testing to begin on operational F/A-18 Super Hornets

    The US Navy is experimenting with 3D-printed patches for composite parts, allowing forward bases to repair F/A-18 Super Hornets without waiting for replacement parts coming from the tail end of a logistics supply chain thousands of miles long.

  2. Mastodon — fosstodon.org TIER_1 English(EN) · [email protected] ·

    US Navy is flight-testing 3D printed fighter jet parts that cut repair times in half — forward-deployed 3… The US Navy is experimenting with 3D-printed patches

    US Navy is flight-testing 3D printed fighter jet parts that cut repair times in half — forward-deployed 3… The US Navy is experimenting with 3D-printed patches for composite parts, allowing forward bases to repair F/A-18 Super Hornets without waiting for replacement parts coming …