Three-dimensional (3D) printers are quickly proving to be capable of
creating just about anything out of little more than thin air, and that
could be the military’s key to keeping an endless arsenal of drones at
its disposal.
Just as 3D-printed organs, pizza and even firearms are being made
with the post-modern machinery, the United States military is eyeing the
up-and-coming technology as to further their upper-hand on the
battlefield. Recently, a decorated member of the US Navy made an
argument for adding unmanned aerial vehicles and even munitions to the
list of items that can be made with little more than a well-equipped
printer and a few clicks of a mouse.
Hobbyists and engineering students have already toyed with the idea
of using 3D printers to make unmanned aerial vehicles, or drones, but
the Navy could piggyback on that idea to ensure that UAVs made to
withstand military operations are soon a reality. In an article
published this month in the Armed Forces Journal, Lt. Cmdr. Michael
Llenza discussed what could be next in the works for the Navy.
“For the Navy, the technology promises to shift inventory from the
physical world to the digital one,” Llenza wrote. “Instead of actual
parts, a ship might carry 3D printers and bags of various powdered
ingredients, and simply download the design files needed to print items
as necessary.”
What kind of items? According to Llenza, just about anything.
“Today’s printers are generally limited to printing parts made of
just one material, and variance is a big issue,” he said. “But the
development of multiple-material devices is well underway, and the
technology is racing ahead.”
Llenza went on to site recent stories where college students at the
University of Virginia printed a UAV that was controlled by a handheld
smart phone. Scientists are still working out the kinks with that
technology, but it’s expected to only be a short while before drones
done entirely using digital blueprints, a printer and a moldable polymer
or plastic soar through the sky.
“The eventual goal is a drone that flies right out of the printer
with electronics and motive power already in place,” Llenza wrote.
Soon enough, he said, the Navy could likely harness that into something fit for the world’s most powerful military.
“An organic ability to print replaceable drones from ships, forward
operating bases or during disaster relief operations to serve as targets
or observation platforms could be a huge enabler for sailors and
Marines,” he wrote.
A Texas college student recently made international headlines after
his blueprints for a gun made almost exclusively with 3D-printed parts
were distributed for free on the Web, prompting condemnation from the
likes of the US State Department and congressional lawmakers. The
“Liberator” handgun has since rekindled a discussion on the Second
Amendment to the US Constitution, but an argument might not even arise
of it if the Pentagon starts printing out weaponry of its own. And
according to Llenza, that’s exactly what’s about to happen.
Llenza said he started talking to an Army colleague at the Atlantic
Council who formerly worked for the company that produces the
nitrocellulose and propellants for much of the US arsenal and realized
what exactly is in store for the future of weapons manufacturing.
“We started talking about printing out ammunition, and he explained
that printing casings would be relatively easy, but that the idea would
be a nonstarter unless you could print the energetic component as well,”
Llenza wrote.
After chatting with researchers at a Virginia Tech laboratory that
has more than just dabbled in drones as of late, Llenza said those
experts agreed that 3D-printed ammunition is indeed an effort worth
pursuing. And given that replacement body parts and even dinner is being
done using the printers, it likely will be a reality sometime soon.
The US Navy recently launched their first-ever drone from an aircraft
carrier off Virginia’s Atlantic coast. Previously, all of the
Pentagon’s UAV missions were carried out by the Air Force.
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