Vietnam Welding Manpower Supplier

The best welders supplier in Vietnam- Get access to www.vnmanpower.com to be supported.

Vietnam Welding Manpower Supplier

The best welders supplier in Vietnam- Get access to www.vnmanpower.com to be supported.

Vietnam Welding Manpower Supplier

The best welders supplier in Vietnam- Get access to www.vnmanpower.com to be supported.

Vietnam Welding Manpower Supplier

The best welders supplier in Vietnam- Get access to www.vnmanpower.com to be supported.

Vietnam Welding Manpower Supplier

The best welders supplier in Vietnam- Get access to www.vnmanpower.com to be supported.

Showing posts with label welding for nasa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label welding for nasa. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 9, 2015

Welding Process for the Spacecraft atop the World’s Largest Rocket Begins

NASA is one more step closer to sending the astronauts to Mars. On Sept 5th, engineers from the agency’s Michoud Assembly Facility in New Orleans successfully welded the first 2 segments of the Orion spacecraft’s main structure that will fly on Exploration Mission-1 – the first flight of Orion atop NASA’s Space Launch System rocket (SLS).

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The main structure of Orion spacecraft is made of 7 large aluminum pieces that must be welded together in a detailed fashion. On Saturday, NASA engineers successfully completed the first weld that connects the tunnel to the forward bulkhead. Those two welded segments are at the top of Orion and house many of this spacecraft’s critical systems – for example, the parachutes deploying during reentry. The tunnel with a docking hatch will enables crews to move between the Orion crew module and other spacecraft.
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At NASA’s Michoud Assembly Facility in New Orleans, on Sept. 5, engineers welded together two segments of the Orion crew module’s primary structure that will fly on Exploration Mission-1, the first flight of Orion atop the NASA’s Space Launch System rocket. (Cr: NASA)
According to Mark Geyer – Orion Program Manager, “Each of Orion’s systems and subsystems is assembled or integrated onto the primary structure, so starting to weld the underlying elements together is a critical first manufacturing step. The team has done tremendous work to get to this point and to ensure we have a sound building block for the rest of Orion’s systems.”

To prepare for welding, engineers undertook a meticulous process. They cleaned the segments, protected them with chemical coating, and primed them. Then, they outfitted each element using strain gauges and wiring to monitor the metal during the fabrication process. Before starting work on the pieces, technicians practised the process, polished their techniques, and ensured right tooling configurations by welding together the pathfinder – a full-scale version of the present spacecraft design.
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At NASA's Michoud Assembly Facility in New Orleans, engineers were welding together the crew module pathfinder in preparation the welding process. (Cr: NASA)
With good collaborations throughout design and manufacturing, the teams have been able to cut down on the number of welds for the Orion crew module by over half since the 1st test version of Orion’s main structure constructed and flown on the Exploration Flight Test-1 last December. There will include 7 main welds and some smaller welds (for the start and stop holes left by the welding tools) in the Exploration Mission-1. Fewer welds will help make the spacecraft lighter.

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The diagram shows 7 pieces of Orion’s main structure and the order that they are welded together. (Cr: NASA)
During the upcoming months, when other pieces of the spacecraft’s main structure arrive at Michoud from the machine house across the country, engineers will inspect and assess them to make sure they address precise design requirements prior to welding. Once complete, this structure will be delivered to NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida that it will be assembled with other elements of Orion, integrated with SLS, and processed before launch.





Friday, August 7, 2015

What is the Name of the World's Largest Welding Tool?

This welding tool is part of the family of leading-edge tools developed to weld the key stage of Space Launch System - the most efficient rocket designed for deep-in-space mission.

By aluminium, many people think of aluminium foil or flimsy can of soda.

While it can’t be denied that aluminium is kinda foil, it is one of the most crucial metals when it comes to space. That’s because of its light weight and durability. To consider aluminium as the only protection against the killing void of space may not be comforting. Still, NASA’s cutting-edge aluminium alloy has, evidently, the best design for its newest generation of manned spacecraft.

In this point, NASA has designed a brand-new terrestrial welding tool shaking up aerospace manufacturing, and standing as a gigantic monument to the reasoning of measure-twice and cut-once.

Without fail, welding in space is possible in case of emergency. Still, the process isn’t really easy all the time. Laser welding gives a means of emergency repair in spite of temperature, gravity or air, but obviously, the ideal spaceship is the one that just needs welding together right in the first time.

Do Big Using Vertical Assembly Center

2014 unveiled NASA’s Vertical Assembly Center in Michoud Assembly Facility (New Orleans). It is the world’s biggest spacecraft welding equipment with 170 feet in height and 78 feet in width. Also, it’s part of leading-edge tools developed to weld key stage of SLS (Space Launch System) – the most efficient space rocket ever designed.

For a wide angle view of Vertical Assembly Center (VAC), a 16mm fish-eye lens was utilized at the ribbon cutting ceremony on September 12th, 2014. The VAC is the world's largest spacecraft welding tool. (Photo cr: NASA)
The Vertical Assembly Center would lift the SLS’s components up and down its striking height utilizing a big mobile ring. This ring helps swiftly and correctly position the rocket’s components when moving along rails. Then they can be welded in situ. This center applies friction stir welding – the favored welding techniques for welding aluminium in aerospace manufacturing – to connect the SLS’s components into one vehicle.

NASA's Friction Stir Welding tools (FSW) bring out qualified and strong welds in aluminum alloys employed to manufacture the Orion spacecraft, Space Launch System rocket which will travel a 4-person craw to Mars.
In March, 2015, Boeing, the manufacturer of the Vertical Assembly Center found out that its rails suffered a slight misalignment, retarding the device production in 3 months or so. This misalignment might have resulted from a shift in the soft Louisiana soil making up the center’s foundation. Still, there is no elimination to the possibility of a uncomplicated manufacturing error. Regardless of the cause, the retardation is pretty mirror, and the rocket will still be launched in 2018 as scheduled.

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