If you plan on building rocket motors at any practical level, you’ll need more
than 1KW and a good investment in ancillaries. Assuming you have an
appropriate, multi-axis base and envelope, plan on investing $50K~$100K to get
set-up with an entry level system that will require a fair amount of
development time on your part. Wire or powder wont matter. It’s at least a 6
figure investment. Good, fast, cheap…you can only pick two.
Anthony J. Cesaroni
President/CEO
Cesaroni Technology/Cesaroni Aerospace
<http://www.cesaronitech.com/> http://www.cesaronitech.com/
(941) 360-3100 x101 Sarasota
(905) 887-2370 x222 Toronto
From: arocket-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <arocket-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> On Behalf Of
David McMillan
Sent: Monday, March 30, 2020 5:28 PM
To: arocket@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [AR] Re: Hyperganic uses AI to design a 3D-printed rocket engine
Just the laser, or does this include the positioner?
On 3/30/2020 3:27 PM, ken mason wrote:
The concept is awesome, the design, funky, why the thick walls and 'excessive'
passages? Looks heavy even if aluminum, CRS even worse.
But when I saw 3D printing tech 10 years ago I wondered how long it would be
before the first bi-prop. Rocket Lab has certainly kicked ass!
I have a brand new 1KW fiber laser available, anyone?
On Mon, Mar 30, 2020 at 6:19 AM Joe Bowen <joe.b.bowen@xxxxxxxxx
<mailto:joe.b.bowen@xxxxxxxxx> > wrote:
https://www.dezeen.com/2020/03/30/hyperganic-ai-rocket-engine-3d-printed/