What's new

Historic!! India tests world's first fully 3D Printed Engine!

Exactly, Rather than always going for bigger engine, it is some time better to use a cluster of small engine. These small engines put to gather can carry a bigger payload in higher orbit.

Yep pretty logical , too bad money again is the issue
Invented plastic 3D printing. Full large piece metal printing was first created by China mate. It was used to print parts for C919 and J20. And we already used it for rocket engines too, but for complex rocket engines, it's impossible to fully print it, hence your agnilet engine is hype like the usual yindoo simputer bullshit. Lol

Invented plastic 3D printing. Full large piece metal printing was first created by China mate. It was used to print parts for C919 and J20. And we already used it for rocket engines too, but for complex rocket engines, it's impossible to fully print it, hence your agnilet engine is hype like the usual yindoo simputer bullshit. Lol

Eh I guess , Indians hype a ton of shit up for the smallest of things which makes actual Indian space nerds cringe.

It doesn't even matter in the end , cause ISRO or any private company has to still get a ton of money to start actually building rockets and even better rockets.
 
.
Yep pretty logical , too bad money again is the issue


Eh I guess , Indians hype a ton of shit up for the smallest of things which makes actual Indian space nerds cringe.

It doesn't even matter in the end , cause ISRO or any private company has to still get a ton of money to start actually building rockets and even better rockets.

Our companies are doing it that means that they have tons of money or not too much of money is required to start such program.
Yet it doesn't even matter cause NASA and SpaceX are decades ahead of ISRO lol , again go check ISRO reddit forum and see that even Indian space nerds don't take this shit seriously. It's basic , ISRO's leadership sucks and they keep delaying shit. And India's rocket engines are reversed engineered like the Vikas aka Viking engine lol.

Upcoming SCE 200 is a reversed engineered Ukraine engine

They don't even have the HLV , ISRO is going to try to land on the moon again with CY3 wish them luck but again ISRO and India has a dam long way to go before it even get close to China.


Money is the issue here , there's a reason why China and America is ahead

Yes, they are much ahead with atleast 3 rocket failure inn3 years. Which is the heaviest satellite China has launched till date?
 
.
because of the number of cryognic engines you keep churning out? Or the extreme success of your technology projects? If we need advice from our inferiors, we will let you know.
EbFZ9OKWkAAA2m3.jpeg

... taking "advice" deep inside your "cryogenic engine" from your inferiors I see...:lol:
 
. . . .
View attachment 716896
yash yash, we can only give you 3d generated cup of fantashtik tea! :lol:

I will shamefacedly agree that...when you outnumber us 26 to 1...and when you have F16 firing AMRAAM....you will manage to shoot down exactly one obselete Mig 21. That much you can do. But it won't matter because the guy flying it will be one of the coolest guys around.
 
.
I will shamefacedly agree that...when you outnumber us 26 to 1...and when you have F16 firing AMRAAM....you will manage to shoot down exactly one obselete Mig 21. That much you can do. But it won't matter because the guy flying it will be one of the coolest guys around.
We "outnumbered" you monkeys "26 to 1"? :woot: that's some potent gobar you been smokin' dude... :drag:
and cooler than the poor bastards flying the doomed su30? :lol:

#2parachutesoveriiok
 
Last edited:
. . .
Invented plastic 3D printing. Full large piece metal printing was first created by China mate. It was used to print parts for C919 and J20. And we already used it for rocket engines too, but for complex rocket engines, it's impossible to fully print it, hence your agnilet engine is hype like the usual yindoo simputer bullshit. Lol

Invented plastic 3D printing. Full large piece metal printing was first created by China mate. It was used to print parts for C919 and J20. And we already used it for rocket engines too, but for complex rocket engines, it's impossible to fully print it, hence your agnilet engine is hype like the usual yindoo simputer bullshit. Lol

Good points but telling these Bhakts about large civilian aircraft programs is like describing the taste of caviar and fine cheese to beggars.

India is incapable of making basic aircraft parts like engines, hydraulics and suspension systems. All imported, even for classified fighter projects.

They make a couple of test things in some lab and with one lone success run out crying "Eureka" !!

This pathetic situation is the result of having almost zero things to be proud of making - in India. When you got nothing to boast about, every little thing makes you excited.

A country of 1.4 Billion, incapable of making anything for commercial application in a FAB and incapable of populating cellphone motherboards with pick-and-place SMT/SMD machines, which is even present in Bangladesh. Almost all circuit boards for cellphones assembled in India comes from outside India.

Indian cellphone brands are dependent on 2nd and 3rd tier Chinese suppliers for cell sub-assemblies (even screens) which they screw together, slap their Indian brandname on it, and trumpet as gloriously "Made in India".

I mean - stop the laughable back slaps already.
 
.
Good points but telling these Bhakts about large civilian aircraft programs is like describing the taste of caviar and fine cheese to beggars.

India is incapable of making basic aircraft parts like engines, hydraulics and suspension systems. All imported, even for classified fighter projects.

They make a couple of test things in some lab and with one lone success run out crying "Eureka" !!

This pathetic situation is the result of having almost zero things to be proud of making - in India. When you got nothing to boast about, every little thing makes you excited.

A country of 1.4 Billion, incapable of making anything for commercial application in a FAB and incapable of populating cellphone motherboards with pick-and-place SMT/SMD machines, which is even present in Bangladesh. Almost all circuit boards for cellphones assembled in India comes from outside India.

Indian cellphone brands are dependent on 2nd and 3rd tier Chinese suppliers for cell sub-assemblies (even screens) which they screw together, slap their Indian brandname on it, and trumpet as gloriously "Made in India".

I mean - stop the laughable back slaps already.
well in all honesty, "zero" was in fact invented in india... :lol: so, yes, "zero" made in india, or as they like to call it, "jero" made in india! :omghaha:
 
.
Indian aerospace startups are surging ahead to catchup with ISRO. After testing India's first kerosine rocket engine, Agnikul has started testing their first semi-cryogenic engine. This one was built fully through 3D Printing. At this rate they will be able to launch a satellite soon!

How many days does it take to make such engine? And any idea about costs per piece?
 
.
Indian aerospace startups are surging ahead to catchup with ISRO. After testing India's first kerosine rocket engine, Agnikul has started testing their first semi-cryogenic engine. This one was built fully through 3D Printing. At this rate they will be able to launch a satellite soon!

Impossible that this is a single piece 3D printed engine. Impossible. Again over hyping and lying. If one piece then pls share the composition of the lovely material used. Rocket engines have variability of temperature, pressures and stress so broad that no single material can sustain. Perhaps they 3D printed some sub-components, but the notion that this entire engine was 3D printed, is impossible to accept.

Having said that India does have a mature space program that they ought to be proud of.
 
Last edited:
. .
Back
Top Bottom