The Space Launch System (SLS): NASA’s Artemis I Moon Rocket with platform. File STL-OBJ for 3D Printer

The Space Launch System (SLS): NASA’s Artemis I Moon Rocket with platform. File STL-OBJ for 3D Printer

cults3d

follow me FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/groups/1797954133626126/?ref=bookmarks ISTAGRAM: cody3d1 https://www.instagram.com/cody3d1/ TWITTER: https://twitter.com/Cody3D ARTSTATION: https://www.artstation.com/cody3d/store YOUTUBE Video: https://youtu.be/MI-bQSg7o9w The Space Launch System (SLS): NASA’s Artemis I Moon Rocket with platform. Model Printing Miniature Assembly File STL-OBJ for 3D Printing FDM-FFF DLP-SLA-SLS Two size 1:18 for FDM-FFF, 1:37 for DLP-SLA-SLS, Assembly Figure more than 200 hours of modeling two versions however, the dimensions can be changed with each slicer in total The Space Launch Systemis is composed of 11 mil points all the files have been decimated by the polygons, but without losing the details, this makes the light files suitable for each computer dimensions FDM-FFF W 20Cm D 17Cm H 52Cm W 7,8Inch D 6,6inch H 20inch dimensions DLP-SLA-SLS W 11Cm D 9Cm H 27Cm W 4,3inch D 3,5inch H 10inch all files are already in place for optimal printing The Space Launch System 3D model was designed to get a clean print result, without considering printing material consumption, However, you are free to rotate, or scale, every part of the model in the most convenient way for you. Each file has been checked and repaired with Netfabb The parts of the model are already positioned for 3D printing Compatible with every Slicer- Simplify3D, Care, Slic3r, etc ... All the parts of the model have been cut so as to be printed vertically, for a higher quality of printing Artemis 1, officially Artemis I,[5] is a planned uncrewed Moon-orbiting mission, the first spaceflight in NASA's Artemis program, and the first flight of the agency's Space Launch System (SLS) rocket and the complete Orion spacecraft.[note 1] NASA is currently targeting a launch window starting from 14 November 2022.[2][6] Formerly known as Exploration Mission-1 (EM-1),[7] the mission was renamed following the creation of the Artemis program. The mission will lift off from Launch Complex 39B at the Kennedy Space Center aboard the Space Launch System rocket. The Orion spacecraft will be launched on a mission of between 26 and 42 days,[8] with at least six of those days in a distant retrograde orbit around the Moon.[8] After reaching orbit and performing a trans-lunar injection (burn to the Moon), the mission will deploy ten CubeSat satellites and the Orion spacecraft will enter a distant retrograde orbit for six days. The Orion spacecraft will then return and reenter the Earth's atmosphere, protected by its heat shield, and splash down in the Pacific Ocean. The mission will certify Orion and the Space Launch System for crewed flights beginning with Artemis 2.[9] After the Artemis 1 mission, Artemis 2 will perform a crewed lunar flyby and Artemis 3 will perform a crewed lunar landing, five decades after the last Apollo mission. The Orion spacecraft for Artemis 1 was stacked on 20 October 2021, marking the first time a super-heavy-lift vehicle has been stacked inside NASA's Vehicle Assembly Building (VAB) since the final Saturn V. On 17 August 2022, the fully stacked vehicle was rolled out for launch, after a series of delays caused by difficulties in pre-flight testing. The first launch attempt was made on 29 August 2022, but was cancelled due to a faulty reading on a redundant sensor. The second attempt on 3 September 2022 was also cancelled after a hydrogen leak was discovered.[10] On the same day, in order to focus on troubleshooting the SLS, NASA decided to forgo any launch attempts in the launch window ending 6 September.[11] After the leak was satisfactorily repaired, the next launch opportunity was initially on 27 September 2022[12] before trajectory forecasts for then-Tropical Storm Ian led to a weather delay. After the weather cleared out, NASA chose 14 November 2022 as the launch date for the Artemis 1 mission.Wikipedia

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