Providing proven tools and solutions to help aerospace companies meet the demanding challenges of a competitive and regulated industry.
Stratasys technologies help our aerospace customers build lighter, go faster and fly farther.
Stratasys polymer additive manufacturing technologies offer a broad selection of printers and materials to cover applications from prototyping to tooling to flight-worthy parts. For aerospace applications, the most widely used technologies are FDM and P3. Stratasys Direct Manufacturing contract services offer the capability to supplement your production and validate new additive technologies.
3D printing offers time and cost efficiencies over traditional manufacturing. It lets you validate ideas quickly and speed decision making. Versatile materials provide a more effective way to make tooling and the capability to make complex flight parts lighter, with fewer components.
Solve design challenges before committing to expensive and time-consuming tooling and production.
Avoid the high cost and long lead time of machined tools with 3D printed jigs, fixtures and custom manufacturing aids.
Stratasys 3D printers used in aerospace applications generally include FDM and P3 DLP printers that offer a versatile range of materials comprising durable and high-performance thermoplastics and photopolymers.
Stratasys 3D printing technologies offer a comprehensive material portfolio to address virtually any polymer additive manufacturing aerospace application. High-performance thermoplastics and photopolymers provide the right physical, mechanical, chemical and thermal properties needed for demanding applications in a regulated industry.
3D printing with high-performance FDM materials offers a faster, more agile means of making lighter, less costly composite tooling.
See how Boom Supersonic uses 3D printing to challenge what’s possible in commercial flight utilising Stratasys technology.
View more3D printing with high-performance FDM materials offers a faster, more agile means of making lighter, less costly composite tooling.
See how Boom Supersonic uses 3D printing to challenge what’s possible in commercial flight utilising Stratasys technology.
The U.S. Air Force employs 3D printing as a cost-effective measure to support its aging aircraft fleet.