Sarah LeTrent reports at CNN that NASA just "emailed" the design of a socket wrench to astronauts so that they could print it out in the orbit. The ratcheting socket wrench was the first "uplink tool" printed in space, according to Grant Lowery, marketing and communications manager for Made In Space, which built the printer in partnership with NASA. The tool was designed on the ground, "emailed" to the space station and then manufactured where it took four hours to print out the finished product. The space agency hopes to one day use the technology to make parts for broken equipment in space and long-term missions would benefit greatly from onboard manufacturing capabilities. "I remember when the tip broke off a tool during a mission," recalls NASA astronaut TJ Creamer, who flew aboard the space station during Expedition 22/23 from December 2009 to June 2010. "I had to wait for the next shuttle to come up to bring me a new one. Now, rather than wait for a resupply ship to bring me a new tool, in the future, I could just print it."
(Score: -1, Offtopic) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday December 21 2014, @03:14PM
I don't know about you, but anyone with the name TJ Creamer sounds like a real cool dude to me.
How did his ancestors get that name? Was one of them well-known for providing bukkake expertise in some medieval English village?
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday December 21 2014, @03:55PM
No, but they fondled some cows
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday December 22 2014, @02:38PM
Actually, it sounds like one of those porn names like Miles Long.