Skip to main content

Project AME: the world’s first 3D-printed excavator

The world’s first 3D-printed excavator was unveiled in the new Tech Experience zone of CONEXPO-CON/AGG. Project AME (Additive Manufactured Excavator), led by Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) and involving multiple partners from industry, trade associations and academia, was instigated back in 2014 when visiting members of the Center for Compact and Efficient Fluid Power (CCEFP) saw ORNL’s 3D-printed car.
March 7, 2017 Read time: 3 mins
Glimpse of the future: the 3D printed excavator

The world’s first 3D-printed excavator was unveiled in the new Tech Experience zone of CONEXPO-CON/AGG.

Project AME (Additive Manufactured Excavator), led by 8584 Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) and involving multiple partners from industry, trade associations and academia, was instigated back in 2014 when visiting members of the Center for Compact and Efficient Fluid Power (CCEFP) saw ORNL’s 3D-printed car.

Project AME (pronounced ‘Amy’) has led to advances in 3D manufacturing processes: “What’s really revolutionary about this project is not the 3D printing of the excavator itself, it’s the development of the technology that allows us to grow big steel parts quickly,” explained Lonnie Love, project lead, and group leader for ORNL’s manufacturing systems research group.

Only certain parts of the mini excavator, which weighs around 6 tonnes (13,000 lb), were 3D printed: the boom, the cab and the heat exchanger.

Wolf Robotics developed the new process for printing the metal boom, achieving a higher accuracy than the team had anticipated: “You are melting metal and growing a big part, seven feet tall. We expected it would shrink,” said Love. “But the accuracy was to within one fifty-thousandth of an inch, an order of magnitude better than we expected.”

The cab was printed using carbon fibre-reinforced acrylonitrile butadiene styrene composites technology by Cincinnati Incorporated. Its organic structure came from students at University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign who won a competition to design the cab. Concept Laser created the heat exchanger.

The difference between the printed parts and conventionally-manufactured parts is that there are fewer pieces. So the boom has hydraulic channels cast into it and the cab is all one piece, including the chair.

The next steps for 3D printing are to speed up the process. “We want to go bigger, faster and cheaper. It’s a scalable technology,” said Love. “At the moment we are printing at a speed of around 5 lb (3kg) per hour - the goal is to print at 100 lb (45kg) per hour.”

Though Love does see a future where machines will be created by 3D printing, a more immediate application is for the creation of moulds, vastly reducing the cost and time to produce. ORNL is already working with car manufacturers to make this a reality this year. In the longer term, once speed of production has increased, this technology could allow machines to be made quickly to order, with the cost of bespoke features vastly reduced.

The excavator is a collaboration between the 1100 Association of Equipment Manufacturers, National Fluid Power Association, Center for Compact and Efficient Fluid Power (CCEFP), ORNL, the National Science Foundation (NSF), Georgia Tech, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign and University of Minnesota (UMN). This project was supported by DOE’s Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy – Advanced Manufacturing Office.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Cat's emerging pavers
    January 4, 2013
    Caterpillar paving products are in demand worldwide, with the firm placing great importance on its offering to Africa and Middle East customers, as Guy Woodford reports. Caterpillar’s new CW34 pneumatic compactor, first exhibited at Intermat 2012 in Paris, is a valued machine in some of the company’s key regional markets, according to Gianluca Lombardi, Cat’s EAME (Europe, Africa and Middle East) paving products regional sales support consultant. It’s an important machine for the Africa and Middle East mark
  • Booming Chinese aggregate demand
    February 22, 2013
    Global demand for construction aggregates is set to increase 5.2% a year until 2015 to 48.3 billion tonnes, according to research by The Freedonia Group in the United States. The same source tips China alone to account for half of all new aggregate demand worldwide in the period 2010-2015. Guy Woodford reports on the growing importance of the Asian aggregates market. China is already the biggest nation for aggregate production and use in the world, and the competition among the giants of aggregate productio
  • Earthmoving market introductions
    February 11, 2020
    Earthmoving innovations are coming to market in the shape of new excavators and wheeled loaders
  • Ammann Mobile Asphalt Plant Built for NA Market
    March 6, 2023
    A new version of the Ammann ACM Prime Asphalt-Mixing Plant has been specially designed for the North American market – and is primarily built in the U.S.