Aitrtech
Published

3D-Printed Tools Are in Production at Falcon Jet

High part variability and low volume make 3D-printed tooling the right fit for Falcon Jet components.

Share

Stratasys, a manufacturer of direct digital manufacturing and rapid prototyping systems using Fused Deposition Modeling (FDM) technology for producing parts and tools, is working with many customers on both part and AM tooling concepts and materials, among them Dassault Falcon Jet. Tim Schniepp, director of Composite Tooling Solutions at Stratasys with extensive aerospace experience, recently introduced me to Bastien Carel and Gregory Hilbert of Falcon Jet’s composites engineering team located at Falcon Jet’s completion center in Little Rock, Arkansas, where the company’s business jets undergo final assembly, including wiring, painting and installation of interiors. Fifty to 70 aircraft undergo completion per year at the Little Rock facility.

First, a little background on Falcon Jet: This venerable French aviation company, which began in 1916 and just celebrated its centenary, was founded by aeronautical engineer Marcel Bloch (later known as Marcel Dassault), who first developed the two-bladed Éclair propeller and founded the Societe d’Etudes Aeronautiques (SEA) to build planes for France in World War I. Later, Bloch’s company designed and built airliners for Air France, prior to World War II. The company grew tremendously between 1945 and 1975, and was responsible for the Mirage and Mystère combat fighter jets as well as French civil aircraft. Falcon Jet is one of the leaders in the business jet segment, with the Dassault Falcon 20 making its first flight in 1963. Today the company is known for its “heavy” business jets, among the largest in the bizjet market. Notably, Marcel Dassault and his engineers helped develop computer-aided design tools for the design of the company’s aircraft, and that ultimately led to CATIA and the spinoff of software company Dassault Systèmes.

Carel and Hilbert report that they are designing and developing large tools, up to 4.6 meters in length, for production of honeycomb-cored composite interior fittings, including flat and curved panels, bulkheads, and aircraft lavatory wall sections. Tools are 3D printed using a Stratasys Fortus 900mc, the largest production printer currently offered by Stratasys. Material is Ultem 1010 polyetherimide (PEI), with a Tg of 420°F; raw materials are supplied by SABIC to Stratasys to produce the final FDM filament. The tools will be produced in segments, joined in a tongue-in-groove manner and bonded with an epoxy, typically with a product such as Henkel’s EA9394. Says Carel, “We are trying a near-net approach to minimize any issues with joining.” Falcon Jet is experimenting now with joining and post-cure machining of the tools, to achieve the finished surface requirements, as well as sealers, to ensure vacuum integrity.

The FDM tools are capable of meeting requirements for dimensional accuracy says Carel, because the composite parts are vacuum-bagged and oven-cured at 250°F. Several rounds of test part cure cycles have been carried out so far, with “no visible flaws,” report Carel and Hilbert. Testing was carried out through April, with the plan to put the 3D-printed tools into the production process after that. Why 3D printing for tooling? Carel explains, “We are in a situation with high part variability and low volume,” in which jets receive customized interior layouts according to each customer’s specs. “We’re utilizing AM tooling as a complement to more traditional tooling. It’s not a direct competition with metal tooling, but it can be more efficient in terms of time and cost.”

Stay tuned for more developments in AM tooling. Schniepp, Hilbert and Carel all agree: in the next few years, 3D printed tooling has potential to be just as robust and production-capable as similar non-metallic tooling materials.  

This blog post originally appeared on compositesworld.com.

IMTS
SolidCAM Additive - Upgrade Your Manufacturing
AM Workshop
Are You a 3D
The Cool Parts Show
AM Radio
Formnext Chicago
AM Workshop

Related Content

Automation

Understanding HP's Metal Jet: Beyond Part Geometry, Now It's About Modularity, Automation and Scale

Since introducing its metal binder jetting platform at IMTS in 2018, HP has made significant strides to commercialize the technology as a serial production solution. We got an early preview of the just-announced Metal Jet S100. 

Read More
Production

How Norsk Titanium Is Scaling Up AM Production — and Employment — in New York State

New opportunities for part production via the company’s forging-like additive process are coming from the aerospace industry as well as a different sector, the semiconductor industry.

Read More
Materials

Additive Manufacturing Is Subtractive, Too: How CNC Machining Integrates With AM (Includes Video)

For Keselowski Advanced Manufacturing, succeeding with laser powder bed fusion as a production process means developing a machine shop that is responsive to, and moves at the pacing of, metal 3D printing.

Read More
Production

Casting With Complexity: How Casting Plus 3D Printing Combine the Strengths of Both

Aristo Cast is advancing a mode of part production in which casting makes the part, but 3D printing enables the geometry.

Read More

Read Next

Hybrid manufacturing

Hybrid Additive Manufacturing Machine Tools Continue to Make Gains (Includes Video)

The hybrid machine tool is an idea that continues to advance. Two important developments of recent years expand the possibilities for this platform.

Read More
Enterprise Issues

At General Atomics, Do Unmanned Aerial Systems Reveal the Future of Aircraft Manufacturing?

The maker of the Predator and SkyGuardian remote aircraft can implement additive manufacturing more rapidly and widely than the makers of other types of planes. The role of 3D printing in current and future UAS components hints at how far AM can go to save cost and time in aircraft production and design.

Read More
Education & Training

4 Ways the Education and Training Challenge Is Different for Additive Manufacturing

The advance of additive manufacturing means we need more professionals educated in AM technology.

Read More
Airtech International Inc.