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CAMRE NPS Demonstrates Deployable Metal Repair Using SPEE3D Cold Spray AM at Trident Warrior

CAMRE NPS demonstrates SPEE3D technology at the most recent US Navy Trident Warrior exercise and proves service members can rapidly produce and repair mission-critical metal components to enhance military readiness and target supply chain vulnerabilities.

When a small metal component fails on a ship at sea, delays in receiving the replacement through traditional sources of supply may have strategic impacts for the U.S. Navy. During the Trident Warrior 2025 fleet experimentation exercise, that question of how quickly a critical part can be replaced moved from the maintenance shop to the center of a live operational trial.

Our deployable metal additive manufacturing technology were among the systems selected. Led by the Consortium for Advanced Manufacturing Research and Education at the Naval Postgraduate School (CAMRE NPS), the trial examined whether our XSPEE3D metal 3D printer could reliably produce mission-relevant components on demand, at the point of need, and in the hands of newly trained operators.

Trident Warrior provides the U.S. Navy with a realistic shore-based and at-sea environment to trial technologies under operational tempo rather than laboratory conditions. For maintainers, the underlying problem is familiar: a single locally unavailable part can sideline an otherwise capable platform, while traditional manufacturing and logistics move at the pace of bureaucracy and freight.

So, CAMRE at NPS introduced the XSPEE3D system to service members from each branch of the U.S. military who were participating in the exercise, training them to operate the printer and our proprietary Cold Spray Additive Manufacturing (CSAM) process. The question was not only whether the technology would work, but whether non-specialist operators could adopt it quickly enough for it to make a practical difference.

While there were numerous examples of additively-produced, near-net-shape metal parts created, CAMRE pioneered the process to utilize XSPEE3D to conduct a repair of a damaged aviation part for the U.S. Navy.

“I think perhaps the biggest win for SPEE3D (tech) during the event was showing how you can use the machine to precisely add material to a damaged part and not have to manufacture a completely new part, saving material labor while improving readiness.”

Chris C. Curran, LtCol., USMC (Ret.), Program Manager – CAMRE
Image credit: Soldiers from the 25th Infantry Division and an Airman from the 15th Maintenance Squadron receive training with a XSPEE3D, guided by a subject matter expert at the Naval Postgraduate School CAMRE’s Advanced Manufacturing Facility during the Trident Warrior 2025 effort with CNSFP and OSD MANTECH taken by Ethan Brown from FLEETWERX.

“Military readiness is critically important to all branches, and they need technologies that provide them the ability to get assets back into service. The Trident Warrior exercises demonstrated how SPEE3D offered the warfighters and maintainers the fastest and most efficient solution to get their systems back up and running, giving them the best chance to complete their missions quickly and effectively.”

Mark Menninger, SPEE3D US Vice President of Defense

For the Navy, these outputs translated directly into shorter periods of equipment downtime and more options for maintaining readiness during the exercise, rather than waiting on external suppliers. The trial reinforced the potential role of deployable metal additive manufacturing in maintenance, repair, and overhaul (MRO) operations far from established industrial bases. By producing mission-critical components on demand, systems like XSPEE3D can help reduce downtime and increase operational availability for the fleet.

About the Consortium for Advanced Manufacturing Research and Education at the Naval Postgraduate School (CAMRE NPS)

The Consortium for Advanced Manufacturing Research and Education (CAMRE) at the Naval Postgraduate School (NPS) is operationalizing advanced manufacturing for the Joint Force. As a thought leader in transitioning research and education into warfighter capabilities, CAMRE achieves this by:

• Addressing immediate needs of service members during operational exercises and deployments using advanced manufacturing;
• Building networks of capabilities among military, government, academic, commercial, and allied partners;
• Pioneering tactics, techniques, and procedures (TTPs) to efficiently transform advanced manufacturing into combat power.

https://nps.edu/web/camre

About FLEETWERX

FLEETWERX serves as the critical intermediary connecting the Naval Postgraduate School with industry, academia and government. For Trident Warrior, FLEETWERX seeks to bring non-traditional defense partners into real and relevant military settings, allowing them to test solutions directly with end-users and accelerate refinement and adoption.

https://www.fleetwerx.org/

About SPEE3D 

SPEE3D is a leading metal additive manufacturing technology company dedicated to developing and delivering metal 3D printers utilizing patented Cold Spray Additive Manufacturing (CSAM) technology. The company’s solutions enable significantly faster production than traditional metal manufacturing for materials including copper, aluminium, stainless steel, and specialized alloys.