Close Menu
AM ChronicleAM Chronicle
  • Content
    • News
    • Insights
    • Case Studies
    • AM Infocast
  • Focus Regions
    • India
    • Asia Pacific
    • Middle East
    • North America
    • Europe
  • Industries
    • Automotive
    • Aerospace
    • Defence
    • Energy
    • Construction
    • Healthcare
    • Tooling
    • Engineering
  • Training
  • Magazine
    • Digital Issues
    • Print Subscription
  • Events
Facebook Instagram YouTube LinkedIn
  • About us
  • Media Kit
  • Contact us
Facebook Instagram YouTube LinkedIn
AM ChronicleAM Chronicle
  • Content
    1. News
    2. Insights
    3. Case Studies
    4. AM Infocast
    5. View All
    Velo3D enters CRADA with NAVAIR to Advance Additive Manufacturing for Aerospace and Defense Applications, Credits: Velo3d

    Velo3D enters CRADA with NAVAIR to Advance Additive Manufacturing for Aerospace and Defense Applications

    June 5, 2025
    Novel Magnetic 3D-Printed Pen

    Novel Magnetic 3D-Printed Pen Can be A Promising Diagnostic Tool for Early-Stage Parkinson’s Disease

    June 3, 2025
    Caption:Researchers have developed a resin that turns into two different kinds of solids, depending on the type of light that shines on it: Ultraviolet light cures the resin into a highly resilient solid, while visible light turns the same resin into a solid that is easily dissolvable in certain solvents. Credits:Credit: Courtesy of the researchers; MIT News

    New 3D printing method by MIT enables complex designs and creates less waste

    June 3, 2025
    NAMI Partners with Ministry to Launch Saudi Arabia’s Advanced Manufacturing Centre

    NAMI Partners with Ministry to Launch Saudi Arabia’s Advanced Manufacturing Centre

    May 30, 2025
    HBD Advances in Metal 3D Printing for Customized Orthopedic Implants

    HBD Advances in Metal 3D Printing for Customized Orthopedic Implants

    June 13, 2025
    Revopoint Trackit Now on Kickstarter: Marker-free 3D Scans Within Everyone's Reach!

    Revopoint Trackit Now on Kickstarter: Marker-free 3D Scans Within Everyone’s Reach!

    May 28, 2025
    Credits: Outokumpu

    Outokumpu launches stainless steel metal powder in additive manufacturing for aerospace and aviation industry applications

    May 22, 2025
    Why Bioprinting Innovations can elevate healthcare and industrial AM

    Why Bioprinting Innovations can elevate healthcare and industrial AM

    May 21, 2025
    Formlabs fuse 1+

    How Imaginarium Helped Kaash Studio Scale with the Right 3D Printing Technology

    April 12, 2025
    The Formlabs Fuse 1+ 30W

    Kaash Studio Optimized Service Bureau Operations with Formlabs 3D Printers- Case Study

    January 30, 2025
    Namthaja Unveils Worlds First 3D Printed Marine Gangway

    Worlds First 3D Printed Marine Gangway unveiled by Namthaja

    August 8, 2024
    RusselSmith Material Performance Improvement Whitepaper

    RusselSmith Whitepaper : Improving Material Performance with Microstructural Refinement

    May 9, 2024
    Sustainable Production of Metal Powder for Additive Manufacturing

    Sustainable Production of Metal Powder for Additive Manufacturing with Bruce Bradshaw

    February 15, 2024
    Meeting Evolving Customer Demands in the Additive Manufacturing Industry with Tyler Reid

    Meeting Evolving Customer Demands in the Additive Manufacturing Industry with Tyler Reid

    February 9, 2024
    Innovation is at the heart of AMUG with Diana Kalisz

    Innovation is at the heart of AMUG with Diana Kalisz

    March 7, 2023
    3D Printing Workshops at AMUG with Edward Graham

    3D Printing Workshops at AMUG with Edward Graham

    March 7, 2023
    HBD Advances in Metal 3D Printing for Customized Orthopedic Implants

    HBD Advances in Metal 3D Printing for Customized Orthopedic Implants

    June 13, 2025
    Velo3D enters CRADA with NAVAIR to Advance Additive Manufacturing for Aerospace and Defense Applications, Credits: Velo3d

    Velo3D enters CRADA with NAVAIR to Advance Additive Manufacturing for Aerospace and Defense Applications

    June 5, 2025
    New 3D Printing Technology Enables Dual-Material Creation from Single Resin

    New 3D Printing Technology Enables Dual-Material Creation from Single Resin

    June 5, 2025
    Novel Magnetic 3D-Printed Pen

    Novel Magnetic 3D-Printed Pen Can be A Promising Diagnostic Tool for Early-Stage Parkinson’s Disease

    June 3, 2025
  • Focus Regions
    • India
    • Asia Pacific
    • Middle East
    • North America
    • Europe
  • Industries
    • Automotive
    • Aerospace
    • Defence
    • Energy
    • Construction
    • Healthcare
    • Tooling
    • Engineering
  • Training
  • Magazine
    • Digital Issues
    • Print Subscription
  • Events
Subscribe
AM ChronicleAM Chronicle
Home » News

Terran 1, Relativity Space’s Rocket Being 3D Printed In Its New Headquarters

News By AM Chronicle EditorOctober 9, 20206 Mins Read
106734073 1602081721357 RELATIVITY SPACE TEMPLAR e1602365159690
LinkedIn Twitter Facebook WhatsApp Pinterest Email Copy Link

Terran 1 – Relativity Space’s rocket’s first iteration is being built. But unlike other rockets, Relativity is using multiple 3D-printers, all developed in-house, to build Terran 1. The rocket is designed to have about 95% of its parts be 3D-printed, which allows Relativity’s rocket to be less complex, and faster to build or modify, than traditional rockets. Additionally, Relativity says its simpler process will eventually be capable of turning raw material into a rocket on the launchpad in under 60 days.

While Relativity had made progress testing its 3D-printing technology, the company’s 120,000 square foot headquarters will serve as the foundation for its manufacturing and launch business. Relativity is now on its third generation of 3D-printers, capable of manufacturing a single piece of metal up to 32 feet tall – as high as the new ceiling allows.

“It’s home base for our efforts for some time to come, as it will allow us to fully produce the Terran 1 rocket,” Relativity’s vice president of factory development Zach Dunn told CNBC. “It’s the factory of the future.”

The company’s new HQ comes with Relativity recently hiring its 200th employee — expansion made possible after raising $140 million last year. Its investors include Social Capital, Playground Global, Y Combinator, Bond Capital, Tribe Capital, Jared Leto and Mark Cuban.

Production underway in the new HQ

Dunn is one of those recent hires, brought on about four months ago after nearly 13 years at SpaceX – most recently the senior vice president of launch and production. Speaking for the first time since he left Elon Musk’s rocket company, Dunn said Relativity has exceeded his expectations.

“We have our engineering offices one door, literally like two steps, away from our engineering area. So the ability to go from your computer and analysis tools to go out and see the hardware means we have a super tight iteration loop, which is great,” Dunn said.

Terran 1 (Tweet by Relativity Space: The robots on Templar are officially mounted. Our next generation of printers are slowly coming together to build.)
Terran 1 (Tweet by Relativity Space: The robots on Templar are officially mounted. Our next generation of printers are slowly coming together to build.)

Relativity has kept and upgraded the first and second generation printers it developed. But the new factory means more space, with the company mounting the robotic arms for the third generation printers in July. Relativity now has at least seven 3D-printers in total – and CEO Tim Ellis told CNBC the company has more coming.

“The new printers are operational and actually printing our first flight parts right now, so we have several printers building the first rocket we’re actually going to fly to orbit,” Ellis said. “We’re building our the first stage for our first flight, as well as the second stage which we started a few weeks ago.”

Some of Relativity’s investors have taken a look at the new HQ, Ellis added, with team members from the Bond Capital and Tribe Capital groups visiting recently.

Third generation 3D printers

The factory features five enclosures for Relativity’s new printers, with the only part of Terran 1 that won’t be 3D-printed being its electrical systems.

“Two buckets of raw material come in and then the printers reconfigure that material into a rocket,” Ellis said.

The new 3D-printer enclosures under construction in August.
The new 3D-printer enclosures under construction in August.

Terran 1 will stand about 115 feet tall on the launchpad, so Relativity is building the rocket in sections and then using a specialized “horizontal conjoining system” to fit the pieces together. That system is essentially another robotic arm that will stitch weld sections together, which Ellis noted can work on two rockets side-by-side.

“The benefit there [with the horizontal conjoiner] is it allows us to run more of these third generation printers in parallel, so we can cut down the total build time of the vehicle,” Dunn said. “We’re able to print on each printer a foot [of metal] a day, so when we’re running on all the printers together we’ll be able to print a rocket in less than a month.”

Earlier this year Relativity verified through a series of pressurization tests that its 3D-printing process would be able to stand up to the intense forces of a launch. Ellis highlighted that the process Relativity uses makes the joints stronger than the rest of the pieces, as its printers make any conjoined sections slightly thicker than the rest.

“Our custom aluminum alloy has been continuously refined and iterated. It’s one of the big advantages of us not selling the 3D-printing systems but being an end user of it,” Ellis said.

Relativity’s all-in approach to 3D-printing has raised skepticism from other rocket builders, which all use additive manufacturing to at least a limited degree. Ellis pointed to data from DARPA, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, that showed the aerospace industry is “still using the same fundamental manufacturing toolset in production and design and development approaches that we were 60 years ago.”

“Compared to other industries [such as automobile manufacturing], DARPA data that shows aerospace is actually going the other direction, with the time to design, develop and iterate a new product actually being slower today than it was 60 years ago,” Ellis said. “History will be the best indicator, but I think where other people are wrong is by just not thinking with enough vision of what the future looks like.”

Ellis has been looking to make good on his vision since co-founding Relativity five years ago. And Dunn, with a decade of experience building the most frequently launched U.S. rockets, echoed his new boss.

“Using additive manufacturing for aerospace applications, for rocket applications, is the real deal. It absolutely can and will work,” Dunn said.

Realtivity’s Terran 1 rocket has just 730 individual parts – about 100 times less than the typical rocket. The reduced complexity also brings with it the ability to quickly make changes and upgrades as Relativity begins launching.

“Not only will we be able to build a rocket in 60 days, but 60 days later we’ll be able to do a better version. And each version we make, we’ll optimize the mass to make it lighter and cheaper and faster for us to produce,” Ellis said. “This is a completely rewrite of the value chain and I think that’s why people are kind of missing it – they’re looking at it as a manufacturing technology. But it’s really an entirely new way to build, design, and develop a product that’s driven by software.”

A timelapse of Relativity's Stargate 3D printer building a rocket fuel tank. A timelapse of Relativity’s Stargate 3D printer building a rocket fuel tank.
A timelapse of Relativity’s Stargate 3D printer building a rocket fuel tank. A timelapse of Relativity’s Stargate 3D printer building a rocket fuel tank.
e22cc466a6e7392fb7e2617b2e35c0d1?s=120&d=mp&r=g
AM Chronicle Editor
3d printing additive manufacturing Aerospace DFAM Relativity Space Space Tech Space Technology Terran 1
AM Chronicle Editor

LATEST FROM AM
HBD Advances in Metal 3D Printing for Customized Orthopedic Implants Insights

HBD Advances in Metal 3D Printing for Customized Orthopedic Implants

June 13, 20253 Mins Read
Velo3D enters CRADA with NAVAIR to Advance Additive Manufacturing for Aerospace and Defense Applications, Credits: Velo3d News

Velo3D enters CRADA with NAVAIR to Advance Additive Manufacturing for Aerospace and Defense Applications

June 5, 20252 Mins Read
New 3D Printing Technology Enables Dual-Material Creation from Single Resin Uncategorized

New 3D Printing Technology Enables Dual-Material Creation from Single Resin

June 5, 20251 Min Read

CONNECT WITH US

  • 126 A, Dhuruwadi, A. V. Nagvekar Marg, Prabhadevi, Mumbai 400025
  • [email protected]
  • +91 022 24306319
Facebook Instagram YouTube LinkedIn

Newsletter

Subscribe to the AM Chronicle mailer to receive latest tech updates and insights from global industry experts.

SUBSCRIBE NOW

Quick Links

  • News
  • Insights
  • Case Studies
  • AM Training
  • AM Infocast
  • AM Magazine
  • Events

Media

  • Advertise with us
  • Sponsored Articles
  • Media Kit

Events

  • AM Conclave 2025
    24-25 September 2025 | ADNEC, Abu Dhabi
  • AMTECH 2025
    3-4 December 2025 | KTPO, Whitefield, Bengaluru
CNT Expositions & Services LLP
© 2025 CNT Expositions & Services LLP.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.



0 / 75