Customer
Sandia National Laboratories
Headquarters
Albuquerque, NM
Industry
Federally Funded Research and Development Center (FFRDC)
Employees
12,000+
As part of a U.S. Department of Energy–funded initiative, Sandia National Laboratories needed to produce a nearly 2-meter aerodynamic wind turbine blade tip, with no room for failure.
The build required:
Although the part could be printed using Fused Deposition Modeling (FDM) technology, automatic filament changeovers introduced variability across three attempts, affecting surface quality and consistency. With each build consuming more than a week of machine time, failures were costly. The team needed to reduce changeovers and stabilize the process without redesigning the part.
Sandia enlisted the help of Stratasys Direct Manufacturing (SDM). For over 30 years, Stratasys Direct™ has led the way in FDM® 3D printing, helping customers solve complex design and manufacturing challenges. They have a successful track record of delivering reliable, high-performance parts for the most demanding applications.
Working with SDM, the team paired the Fortus FDC material delivery and drying cabinet with the F900® industrial 3D printer to reliably produce the large blade tip in high-performance ULTEM™ 9085 resin. The Fortus FDC increases material capacity while maintaining controlled filament conditioning.
For such a large, complex part, the Fortus FDC reduced material changeovers from seven to just two during the 8-day build. Fewer interventions meant:
With the Fortus FDC, the team printed the blade tip successfully on the first attempt. The part met quality expectations without the transition defects seen in previous builds, eliminating the cost and risk of additional eight-day reprints.
In large-format additive manufacturing, long builds magnify variability. Changeovers and moisture instability can quickly lead to lost capacity, delays, and waste. By reducing changeovers and stabilizing filament conditioning, the Fortus FDC delivered mission critical manufacturing confidence.
For more information, this work was highlighted by Sandia National Laboratories in the following article.