TUSAŞ Engine Industries, Inc. (TEI) selects GE Additive technology
TUSAŞ Engine Industries, Inc. (TEI) selects GE Additive technology

Paris - 17 June 2019 - GE Additive today proclaimed at the Paris Air Show that TUSAŞ Engine Industries, Inc. (TEI) has made a big investment in its direct metal laser melting (DMLM) technology with the purchase of two M LINE factory systems and two M2 cusing machines. Financial terms were not shared.
 
TEI was based in 1985 as a joint venture between GE Aviation and Turkish Aerospace Industries , the Turkish Armed Forces Foundation and the Turkish Aeronautical Association and for the past thirty years TEI has manufactured more than 1000 unique parts across a wide assortment of goods for the global and Turkish aviation industry and today supplies services to OEMs for more than 40 separate types of military and commercial engine programs.
 
TEI has proceeded to invest in its additive technology capabilities and infrastructure over recent years, in line with the aerospace and defense industry's continued shift from prototyping to serial, industrial-scale production.
 
The new GE Additive M Line Factory and M2 systems will be mounted at TEI's headquarters in Eskişehir and complement the company's existing fleet of laser and Arcam EBM machines.
 
'Today, we devote in TEI's long-term by trading in additive manufacturing, ‘the future of manufacturing.' Our longstanding partnership and collaboration with GE is now broadening with GE Additive's machine portfolio,' said Professor Dr. Mahmut Faruk Akşit, President & CEO, TEI.
 
'The M2 stays the machine of choice for our aerospace customers - and for good reason. It's not only the work horse of our machine portfolio, but it meets the specific needs and demands of this highly-regulated industry,' said Jason Oliver, President & CEO, GE Additive.
 
'And with so many aerospace customers on the cusp of industrialization, our M LINE Factory with its modular machine architecture, outstanding automation and reliability causes it the perfect solution to drive economical, scalable series production on an industrial scale,' Oliver added.



This article is originally posted on Tronserve.com

Published : 18-Jun-2019

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