23 April 2023

ROSOTICS (Made in Mesa) The easiest way to build. Hyper-efficient manufacturing. Creating the world's largest Metal 3D printers, for aerospace and defense

"Rosotics produces hyper-efficient metal additive manufacturing solutions to solve tougher problems in industrial engineering. With the Rapid Induction Printing approach, we enable industry to additively manufacture structures using far less energy and material resource than any other alternative method. We have developed a breakthrough platform for large-scale production that utilizes this approach, in order to radically simplify implementation and redefine where additive manufacturing can be applied.

Long term, our intention is to use simplicity in order to vastly expand the scope and scale of additive manufacturing."

We Are

BOUNDARY BREAKERS

Christian LaRosa

Founder and CEO

An FAA-licensed remote pilot, Christian’s background is primarily in the space of aerospace engineering and bionics (biologically-inspired engineering). He has previously served on a student-led effort to develop a Pulsed-Plasma Thruster (PPT) under support from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory and Raytheon. Christian also participated in NASA Lucy’s L’SPACE NPWEE, developing a new method of lunar seismic data collection for the Marshall Space Flight Center. He carries intern experience with the Port of Tampa Bay in international logistics. His contribution is in leading the team in line with a technically complex vision.

  • LinkedIn

A: An obsession over seeing the cyclic, patterned world and how it works. It tends to hide brilliance in plain sight.

Q: What is the most important attribute of leaders today?

Vanessa's background is primarily in the corporate and trade sectors. She holds a master of science degree in industrial and organizational psychology, where she learned to translate methods of management that create a workplace that is effective and desirable. In addition, she carries experience with the Greater Maricopa Foreign Trade Zone (GMFTZ), one of the fastest growing trade zones in the western US, providing valuable knowledge of regional logistics. She has been a volunteer for the non-profit organization, ACES, for over 6 years.

  • LinkedIn

Vanessa Alexander

Director of People & Culture

A: My friends and family would describe me as a lover of musicals and dance. Someone who loves to learn and reads every single piece of information at a museum.

Q: How would those who know you describe you?

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Recent News & Activity

NewsMar 29, 2023
SpaceNews.com — 
NewsMar 28, 2023
Business Journals — 
NewsNov 22, 2022
manufacturingtomorrow.com — 
NewsNov 22, 2022
Yahoo! News — 
NewsNov 22, 2022
AZ Inno — 
NewsNov 22, 2022
Payload — 
NewsNov 22, 2022
Benzinga — 
Funding RoundAug 12, 2022
Rosotics raised $750,000 Pre Seed from Christian Edler and 5 other investors
Funding RoundAug 5, 2019
Rosotics raised $86,500 Pre Seed 

Apr 3, 2023 — Rosotics aims to use its rapid induction printing technology to efficiently 3D print parts. Image. Rosotics aims to use its rapid induction ...
Rosotics' solution is a new method called rapid induction. Instead of heating the feedstock with an outside source, the technique uses induction to generate ...
Mar 29, 2023 — A company in Arizona called Rosotics has developed a large-scale printer based on this this method that they're calling the Mantis.
Mar 29, 2023 — Nicknamed “baby SpaceX” in the industry, Rosotics has already caught the eye of investors and leaders in aerospace. It was established in 2019 ...

Mesa-based Rosotics expands footprint at Falcon Field Airport

 

Rosotics
Christian LaRosa, founder and CEO of Rosotics, poses with the Mantis, the company's heavy metal 3D printing system.
Rosotics


Rosotics is planning a major expansion at Falcon Field Airport in Mesa where it intends to create a manufacturing, research and development campus for its heavy metal 3D printing system that will hit the market later this year. 

The Mesa-based startup has inked a lease for nearly 130,000 square feet in two hangars in the northwest section of Falcon Field, the company announced at a launch event Friday. The company previously occupied 15,800 square feet of space in a hangar at the airport.

Rosotics Raises $750,000 Pre-seed Round Led by Draper Associates For Novel Approach to Heavy Industry 3D Printing

Company is pioneering Rapid Induction Printing,™ based on biomimicry, which requires significantly less power than existing methods of metal 3D printing

Rosotics, innovators in additive manufacturing, today announced $750,000 in pre-seed funding led by Draper Associates. The company's hyper-efficient, proprietary 3D printing process, Rapid Induction Printing™, requires significantly less energy and fewer material resources than current methods to produce a high-quality product, while also allowing for much larger prints than have ever been possible before. 

This round of funding also featured participation from Correlation Ventures, Vibe Capital, and Sequoia Capital, bringing significant aerospace heritage and deep-tech experience to the mission. Rosotics is currently working with the aerospace industry as it rolls out its technology.

"We hold the belief that the most natural and effective way to 3D print metal involves induction. Many metals conduct electricity and we can use that to our advantage, instead of adding incredibly inefficient and even dangerous hardware into the loop. Since our approach does away with the laser, we can even widen the nozzle and put down more material per hour." says Founder and CEO Christian LaRosa, a former aerospace engineer.

Rosotics' proprietary printing system, called 'Mantis,' is designed to fold up like origami, allowing it to be easily packed and transported. Inspired by nature, Mantis gets its name from the insect world, with arms that unfold and stretch, allowing for larger 3D prints than ever before. 
When fully deployed it can print items larger than any other 3D printer to date. In fact, Mantis (Generation 1) will be capable of printing from 1.5m (5') up to 8m (26') in diameter, and up to 9m (30') in height in aerospace-grade aluminum and steel. The system is purpose built for the materialization of large-scale 3D printing across a wide range of applications, including on-site manufacturing.

"Additive manufacturing has been with us in the mainstream for well over a decade and has revolutionized the manufacture of metallic complex parts like those found in rocket engines," said Jim Cantrell, Co-Founder of SpaceX, Phantom Space.
 "The physical scale of such parts, however, has been limited to well under a meter and this new technology is needed to extend this revolutionary manufacturing technique to much larger structures. Rosotics is doing just that. Their new approach to additive manufacturing combines robotics and 3D-style printing into one unit that in essence has no scale limitations. This capability, in the long run, will revolutionize the manufacturing of metallic structures in ways that we cannot even imagine today. Rosotics is building the future of manufacturing right in my Arizona backyard and I am very proud to be advising them, and to use their capabilities in my aerospace and automotive enterprises."

Rosotics is tackling the monumental task of revolutionizing metal additive manufacturing in a set of pristine hangars at Falcon Field Airport in Mesa, Arizona. The facility, which is fit for advanced rocket manufacturing, sits in the heart of a community of aerospace innovation, including giants like Boeing and Virgin Galactic, the latter having recently chosen to build its next-generation spacecraft SpaceShip III nearby.

"The beautiful thing is that although we are starting in aerospace, our vision is that we will soon be able to create some part of everything. Mantis is just the beginning, and as our process becomes more dynamic there will be no size limit to what we can build and where we can build it.

And we're humbled to have earned the nickname 'baby SpaceX' from our peers in the area." says Austin Thurman, COO, who met LaRosa while they were both studying at Arizona State University.

"Rosotics makes the largest metal 3D printers in the world and they will fundamentally change aerospace manufacturing forever. Their proprietary process, Rapid Induction Printing, allows customers of the company to easily iterate and produce novel vehicles for space and transportation," said Tim Draper, founding partner of Draper Associates. "We at Draper Associates are thrilled to be part of their journey."

While interest in Rosotics' efficient, portable 3D printing solution is high in the aerospace sector, industries such as construction, marine, and energy will also benefit from the new technology. 
To learn more, please visit Rosotics.com.

About Rosotics
Rosotics uses a proprietary approach, Rapid Induction Printing™ to dramatically expand the scope and opportunities of additive manufacturing for heavy materials industries. The company's process and breakthrough platform for large-scale production dramatically reduces the energy and material requirements for large-scale 3D printing, bringing the concept of "no scale limitations."




Rosotics unveils 3D printer for rocket tanks and fairings

Rosotics unveiled a prototype March 24 of the Mantis, a metal 3D printing platform the company is marketing for aerospace applications.
 Pictured left to right: SeedScout founder Mat Sherman and Christian LaRosa, Rosotics co-founder and CEO. Credit: Rosotics

SAN FRANCISCO – Rosotics will begin deliveries later this year of new type of 3D printer for large aerospace structures.

Traditional 3D printers rely on high-power lasers to heat metal wire or feedstock. Rosotics heats the feedstock with a magnetic field in the 3D printer nozzle.

“You get the same end result without the laser in that process,” Christian LaRosa, Rosotics co-founder and CEO, told SpaceNews. “That helps efficiency enormously. We are powering the Mantis using a single cord going into a 240-volt power outlet.”

Mesa, Arizona-based Rosotics plans to begin delivering the Mantis in the third quarter of 2023 to customers who place $95,000 deposits and sign hardware-as-a-service contracts.

After delivery, Rosotics “will install, maintain and upgrade your hardware over time without any cost to you,” LaRosa said.

While the Mantis can be configured for various tasks, the starting point is a one printhead to additively manufacture aluminum or steel structures ranging in size from 1.5 to 8 meters in diameter.

Rosotics unveiled the Mantis prototype March 24, one day after Relativity conducted its first launch of the 3D-printed Terran 1 rocket.

“Relativity has developed this capability of 3D printing a launch vehicle for Relativity,” LaRosa said. “We’ve been focused on creating a new form of metal additive that will reduce the difficulty in getting 3D printing implemented in a field like aerospace.”

Jim Cantrell, CEO and co-founder of Tucson, Arizona-based Phantom Space, said Rosotics printers could prove useful to launch vehicle manufacturers.

Rosotics will need to prove the Mantis’ printed parts “have consistent metallurgical properties,” Cantrell said. “But it looks promising.”  

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