U.S. Army is heading towards integrating 3D printing within its supply chain

A 3D printed metal part testing the capabilities of custom alloys. This part shows the geometric capabilities of 3D printing with the symbol of the newly formed Army Futures Command. Photo via the U.S. Army/David McNally.

The U.S. Army is working towards developing its supply chain to support the integration of additive manufacturing. That’s according to Gen. Gus Perna, the head of Army Materiel Command, speaking at a press event in Washington on February 4, 2020. 

Having been experimenting and trialing the technology in recent times, Perna states that it is now pertinent for the U.S. Army to develop a means for effectively deploying and utilizing 3D printing across the service, particularly within arsenals, depots, and plants. 

To this end, an advanced manufacturing policy was approved by Secretary of the Army Ryan D. McCarthy in October 2019, which focused specifically on “Enabling Readiness and Modernization Through Advanced Manufacturing”. The policy seeks to push the adoption of 3D printing forward in the force in order to manufacture parts quickly.  Reaffirming its commitment to advanced manufacturing and 3D printing, Perna states that the next step for the U.S. Army is to develop a process for using the capabilities of the technology across the force.

The U.S. Army has established a number of additive manufacturing initiatives over the years. As well as seeking to develop and implement the technology within the force itself, the U.S. Army has also acted as a primary source of funding for cutting edge research around technology. 

For example, working together with the Marine Corps Systems Command (MCSC), the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) is working to build bases using 3D printed cement. The development of high-strength alloys for 3D printing is just one of many additive manufacturing research projects currently being undertaken at the Army Research Laboratory (ARL). 

Marines from 7th Engineer Support Battalion along with engineers from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Construction Engineering Research Laboratory pose with a concrete bunker during a 3D concrete printing exercise. Photo via U.S. Marines/Staff Sgt. Michael Smith, 7th ESB.

In late 2018, ARL and the U.S. National Center for Manufacturing Sciences (NCMS) also opened the Advanced Manufacturing, Materials, and Processes (AMMP) Center and Consortium in Aberdeen, Maryland. Leading 3D printer OEM 3D Systems is a key collaborator for additive manufacturing projects at the center.

In 2019, prior to the creation of the advanced manufacturing policy, one of the more prominent developments comprised the launch of the AMNOW program by the National Center for Defense Manufacturing and Machining (NCDMM) alongside additive manufacturing accelerator America Makes, and Pennsylvania-based consultancy Catalyst Connection. Funded by the U.S. Army Combat Capabilities Development Command (CCDC) Aviation & Missile Center, the program seeks to facilitate additive integration into army logistics.

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