Ryan Whitwham of Gook.com captured the idea in just a headline: "NASA's 3D Printed Rocket Engine Did Not Blow Up."
From Geek:
The procedure employed to produce this engine is known as selective laser melting
Anyone who's followed the 3D printing exploits of Cody Wilson and his 3D-printed weapons company
The part the space agency produced — a fuel injector — usually takes a year to build. Now, NASA claims they built this iteration in about 4 months, at a mere fraction of the cost.
And NASA isn't the only one who recognizes the benefits, the Department of Defense is in the mix as well.
The
There's even been talk of 3D printing human tissue — unproven, but if anything, NASA's bold test bolsters such thoughts.
The implications reach even into the relations of the world's super powers.
Last year, Boston Consulting Group predicted "that as much as 30% of America's exports from China could be domestically produced by 2020," Jon Koten of the Wall Street Journal reports.
Indeed, NASA's rocket test was not a step, but a giant leap for the future of 3D printing.