Alstom Opens New Facilities For 3D Printing Hub

Alstom Opens New Facilities For 3D Printing Hub At Santa Perpètua Site, Barcelona

Alstom Opens New Facilities For 3D Printing Hub At Santa Perpètua Site, Barcelona

Alstom Opens New Facilities For 3D Printing Hub At Santa Perpètua Site, Barcelona. Image - Alstom

THE 3D printing hub at Alstom’s Santa Perpètua Industrial Center, in Barcelona, has opened new facilities in a space that is dedicated to the printing team and equipment at Alstom.

The 3D printing hub at Alstom’s Santa Perpètua Industrial Center, in Barcelona, has opened new facilities in a space that is dedicated to the printing team and equipment at Alstom, reports the company. The new facilities, located in the heart of the factory, has a component scanner, ten FDM (Fused deposition modelling) industrial wire machines, and three SLA-DLP (Stereolithography – DLP: digital light processing) resin devices, which allow printing tools for industrial centres and prototypes to validate designs, moulds, and serial parts.

From April 2020 to March 2021, the Hub has designed and printed more than 258 different types of parts, with a total of 13,978 pieces manufactured, resulting in significant time savings equivalent to weeks of work.

“This new enlarged Hub will allow us to increase the number of components generated by 3D printing, including structural, functional, and safety elements; incorporating new materials and techniques that improve Alstom’s manufacturing processes,” says Jaume Altesa, head of the Hub and one of the group’s leading 3D printing experts worldwide.

One of the keys to success in incorporating printed parts into the manufacturing process is based on the Barcelona team’s specialisation in plastics approved for use in rolling stock, highly resistant to fire and smoke. This expertise allows them to carry out the entire workflow from the centre, including post-processing and reverse engineering tasks and providing support to the rest of its centres.

he Hub has participated in many key projects at Group level, such as the TGV 2020 (Alstom’s latest generation of very high-speed trains), in collaboration with the La Rochelle factory, for the analysis and redesign of train components.

Created in 2016, as part of Alstom’s “Industry of the Future” program, the 3D printing centre at the Santa Perpètua Industrial Centre was the pioneer in incorporating this type of technique at Alstom, and is now a world reference within the group, both in R&D processes and in the production of components.

The centre is currently immersed in several innovation projects focused on metal 3D printing and joint initiatives with other company centres and in collaboration projects with the regional ecosystem of companies dedicated to 3D printing in Catalonia.

Written by

Laura Kemp

Originally from UK, Laura is based in Axarquia and is a writer for the Euro Weekly News covering news and features. Got a news story you want to share? Then get in touch at editorial@euroweeklynews.com.

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