Get the latest news on coronavirus impacts on general aviation, including what AOPA is doing to protect GA, event cancellations, advice for pilots to protect themselves, and more. Read More
Already a member? Please login below for an enhanced experience. Not a member? Join today
Menu

Printed jet passes testPrinted jet passes test

GE Angel Trumpet video by GE Reports.

A miniature turbojet spooled up on a test bench and expanded the envelope of 3-D printing in a recent experiment by GE Aviation documented by GE Reports.

The engine—about the size of a jumbo coffee can, roughly a foot long and eight inches tall—was built with a 3-D printer, though not the sort a hobbyist can buy online. GE Aviation engineer David Bartosik explained the basics in a YouTube video that shows the miniature jet firing up in a GE test facility, after being built layer by layer by a laser that melts metal to form each part.

“We started with a design for a radio-controlled aircraft engine, and improved it to be designed for additive manufacturing,” Bartosik explains, with an implicit don’t-try-this-at-home. The metals used are “high-strength, high-temperature alloys that typically aren’t available for the RC industry.”

The engine at first lit up the lab like a blowtorch, though the flame eventually disappeared as the high-pitched whine increased (engineers dubbed their miniature jet “Angel Trumpet”) and things settled down. A second test fire took those 3-D-printed parts up to 33,000 rpm, with no sign of trouble.

The point of the exercise was not, apparently, to prototype “a jet engine for the Oompa-Loompas,” as Michael Keller described it for GE Reports, but rather to demonstrate the potential for 3-D printing to produce parts able to withstand the forces and temperatures in a turbine environment. One member of the team described it as "a fun side project." The 3-D printing process, at first used strictly to make plastic parts, has evolved into one capable of producing metal parts with the same benefits: less wasted material, and the ability to fabricate highly complex parts in a single piece.

Oompa Loompas are a figment of Roald Dahl’s imagination, of course, though Jetman Yves Rossy is one real-world character who might be interested in testing a tiny turbojet.

The laser melts metal powder into high-strength alloys. Image courtesy of GE Reports.
Jim Moore

Jim Moore

Editor-Web
Editor-Web Jim Moore joined AOPA in 2011 and is an instrument-rated private pilot, as well as a certificated remote pilot, who enjoys competition aerobatics and flying drones.
Topics: Technology, Aviation Industry

Related Articles