GE Aerospace Targets Additive Manufacturing in $650M Investment

By on March 22nd, 2024 in Corporate, news

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Entering GE Aerospace’s facility [Source: Fabbaloo]

Manufacturing facilities in Alabama, Massachusetts, North Carolina and Ohio to receive building and equipment upgrades along with more than 1,000 new jobs.

GE Aerospace has announced a significant investment in it manufacturing facilities, with an emphasis on additive manufacturing (AM). The company plans to invest nearly $450 million in new machines, inspection equipment, building upgrades, new test cells and safety enhancements at 22 facilities across 14 states.U.S.-based suppliers will receive another $100M, as will some of GE Aerospaceā€™s international sites in North America, Europe and India.ā€œ

As GE Aerospace prepares to become a standalone company this spring, we are making significant investments in the future of flight and in the dozens of communities and supplier partners helping us build it,ā€ said H. Lawrence Culp, Jr., Chairman and CEO of GE and CEO of GE Aerospace in a press release.

ā€œThese investments are part of the next chapter for GE Aerospace, supporting cutting-edge equipment and safety enhancements that will help us meet our customersā€™ growing needs.ā€

Of particular note is the investment in GE Aerospaceā€™s Auburn, Alabama facility, which will receive $54M for additional additive machines and tooling to increasing production of military rotorcraft engine components and commercial aircraft engines.The company also plans a $107M investment (the largest proportion) to facilities in the greater Cincinnati region.

This will cover new additive manufacturing machines, new tooling and equipment, and modernization upgrades to test cells. All of this is expected to increase production capacity of commercial and military aircraft engines.

Read the rest of this story at ENGINEERING.com

By Kerry Stevenson

Kerry Stevenson, aka "General Fabb" has written over 8,000 stories on 3D printing at Fabbaloo since he launched the venture in 2007, with an intention to promote and grow the incredible technology of 3D printing across the world. So far, it seems to be working!

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