Metal 3D printing cuts failure points in complex gas turbines
3 Articles
3 Articles
Metal 3D printing cuts failure points in complex gas turbines
Metal additive manufacturing continues to expand beyond aerospace prototypes and into production-focused energy systems. That shift gained momentum this week as Velo3D and gas turbine developer Aurelia Technologies unveiled a partnership aimed at bringing 3D printing deeper into next-generation turbine development. The companies plan to evaluate, qualify, and eventually manufacture turbine components using additive techniques. Their goal extends…
Velo3D, Aurelia partner on additively made turbines
Velo3D, Inc. and Aurelia Technologies announced a strategic partnership focused on advancing the use of additive manufacturing in next‑generation gas turbine systems. Velo3D + Aurelia Technologies. The partnership supports Aurelia’s broader continuous‑improvement strategy, one centered on design consolidation, faster iteration, supply chain resilience, and long‑term cost reduction. The collaboration is important for Velo3D as it underscores the …
Velo3D and Aurelia Technologies Partner on Additive Manufacturing for Small-Scale Gas Turbines
Metal additive manufacturing company Velo3D and Aurelia Technologies, a Texas-based developer of fuel-flexible, high-efficiency small-scale gas turbines, have announced a strategic partnership to expand the use of 3D printing in gas turbine systems. The agreement fits into Aurelia’s broader continuous-improvement roadmap, built around consolidating designs, iterating faster, strengthening supply chain resilience, and lowering costs over…

Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 100% of the sources are Center
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium

