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Redwire paves future of space technology in Northeast Florida

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Title: Redwire paves future of space technology in Northeast Florida

Originally reported on www.jacksonville.com by Alexandria Mansfield

20000756 – TECH NEWSer | 20000758 – Rocketry Aerospace Engineering | •| Tech |•| Newser |•| Technology | •| Rocketry |•| Aerospace |•| Engineering |

Redwire paves future of space technology in Northeast Florida.

NASA Administrator and three-term former U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson said Jacksonville “has become the center for space technology.”

Nelson recently took a tour of the technology being developed at Redwire, an aerospace manufacturer and space infrastructure company. He said he would not have expected for Jacksonville to take such a prominent role in space developments 50 years ago when he met his wife in the city.

During the tour earlier this month at the Baymeadows facility, Redwire touted developments that will allow astronauts to manufacture and service equipment while in space, including robotics and 3D printing technology.

Redwire is working on NASA’s On-Orbit Servicing, Assembly and Manufacturing (OSAM-2) mission.

CEO Pete Cannito said the company’s goal is to assist and enable scientists to effectively transform space.

Nelson explained this technology is crucial to the advancement of space travel because it will reduce the number and size of items being launched. 

For example, one of the spools of printing material demonstrated for Nelson could produce a structural beam about 50 feet long.

Justin Kugler, the general manager of the Jacksonville Redwire facility talks with NASA Administrator Bill Nelson as they look over a device creating spools of Ultem plastic that will be used to print 50-foot support beams in space on Redwire's Archinaut self-constructing satellite in the lab overseen by Material Scientist Benjamin Stubbs during Nelson's tour of the facility May 10 in Jacksonville.

“You’re able to get much larger structures into space because you’re building them up there,” he said. “You don’t have to manufacture everything on Earth before taking off.” 

This saves space on rockets already set to launch and reduces the need to build bigger rockets in order to use larger pieces of equipment.

Additionally, some of the robotics technology is focused on changing and deorbiting space debris, which can cause problems for the International Space Station and satellites in the same orbit.

Kevin French, a senior robotics engineer at Redwire, explains the robotic arm for the company's self constructing satellite that will hold a 3D printer designed to create a 50-foot support beam while in orbit, rotate the 3D printer 180 degrees, then create a second one for the other side of the satellite to NASA Administrator Bill Nelson during his May 10 visit in Jacksonville.

Nelson said this type of work at Redwire is the key in extending stays on the moon and manning trips to Mars.

Redwire’s contracted work is part of a $74 million NASA-funded initiative to expand the scope of what is possible to do and accomplish in space.

The next step in the process for this equipment is to take it from the “demonstration phase to the operational phase,” said Redwire President and COO Andrew Rush.


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