Renishaw empowers Tronosjet with advanced AM technology

Renishaw helps Tronosjet Manufacturing achieve FAA certification for metal additive manufactured parts.

Editor's Note: This article originally appeared in the June 2025 print edition of Aerospace Manufacturing and Design under the headline “Boosting additive manufacturing capabilities in MRO.”

Renishaw Canada Area Sales Manager Félix Delorme and Jeff Campbell of Tronosjet in Summerville, Prince Edward Island, Canada.
PHOTOS COPYRIGHT © RENISHAW

When Tronosjet Manufacturing wanted to boost its additive manufacturing (AM) capabilities and achieve regulatory compliance for its metallic aerospace parts, it turned to Renishaw for support. Renishaw supplied multiple laser powder bed fusion (LPBF) AM systems, which Tronosjet uses to produce various aircraft components. These include an engine thrust control pulley bracket – one of the first additively produced metallic parts to be certified by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) under its Parts Manufacturer Approval (PMA) scheme.

Background

Founded in 2001, Tronosjet is a Canadian aircraft leasing, major modification, and aircraft maintenance provider. Historically the company has owned and managed a fleet of more than 60 BAe 146 (Avro RJ) aircraft, including engines and spare parts on behalf of third parties.

In 2016, the company founded its advanced manufacturing division, established to use AM to produce different aerospace components for its customers. As part of its AM service, its team designs, prints, heat treats, post-processes, and metallurgically tests parts to deliver qualified components along with the required certification data. Its manufacturing facility carries approval as an Aerospace Manufacturing Organization under Transport Canada 561, along with AS9100 approval for design and development.

Although more manufacturers are starting to use AM to produce aerospace components, very few components have received regulatory approval from the FAA – preventing customers from flying them. To demonstrate the capability of AM production, Tronosjet selected a BAe 146 part to produce using AM – a cast magnesium engine thrust control pulley bracket suffering from corrosion. The bracket holds a pulley, which redirects engine cables traveling from the cockpit to the pylon connecting the engine to the airframe. Statically, the bracket is usually loaded with 60 lb to100 lb of tension from the cable.

“The thrust control pulley bracket was determined by the FAA to be a Class 1 (critical) part, essential for the safety of the aircraft,” explains Jeff Campbell, director of maintenance and manufacturing at Tronosjet. “We knew additive manufacturing could provide the required strength, and having our new bracket certified by the FAA would validate the use of additive in aerospace production.”

Challenge

With AM still a relatively new technology, Tronosjet knew it needed to demonstrate the quality, strength, and reliability of printed parts to the FAA and its regulatory groups composed of material scientists, aerospace engineers, and other airworthiness specialists.

Operator with RenAM 500S Flex

“Over the years, we’ve communicated with the FAA many times on different projects, and we understand how it works as a regulatory body,” Campbell adds. “This gave us an advantage because we knew what to expect. We knew we’d need to prove the bracket’s safety using tensile, fatigue, and non-destructive testing (NDT) and to show it wouldn’t degrade over time.”

As well as proving the bracket could pass NDT, tensile, and fatigue testing, Tronosjet needed to demonstrate the repeatability of the titanium alloy and its manufacturing process. Therefore, it required a high-quality AM system that could produce complex metallic components and instill confidence with the regulators in the company’s production team. At this point, it turned to Renishaw.

Solution

“Our relationship with Renishaw goes way back, and we first came to the UK to meet with its CEO in 2018,” Campbell says. “The reason we decided to go for a Renishaw system is the brand – it’s a trust marker and we knew it was a company that offers excellent engineering and process capability. Its RenAM 500 series are world-class AM machines, and of the quality we needed to achieve FAA certification. Also, we were impressed with Renishaw’s presence across North America, and its local support was important for us as a small business taking on new technology.”

Eventually, Tronosjet purchased three RenAM series machines from Renishaw: the AM250, the 500S Flex, and the 500Q. All use LPBF for metal component volume production and have a build volume of 250mm x 250mm x 350mm. The AM250 and RenAM 500S Flex are single-laser machines, while the RenAM 500Q is a four-laser system that also offers automatic powder recycling.

To produce the thrust control pulley bracket, Tronosjet chose the AM250, which can produce complex metal components directly from computer-aided design (CAD) models using materials including titanium, aluminum, and nickel. It chose this system because the AM250 can produce parts with the high material properties expected by the FAA, and it doesn’t employ multiple lasers or reuse powder – these are still highly innovative production features, which may have sparked caution among some of the FAA’s regulators.

Result

Renishaw supplied the three RenAM systems, and Tronosjet printed the engine bracket on the AM250 using a Ti-6Al-4V titanium alloy. Its team then conducted extensive NDT, static, functional, and destructive testing and compared its performance with the original cast magnesium bracket, finding the titanium-printed version was 5x stronger. The printed bracket survived loads of more than 22,000 lb, while the original broke at just 4,000 lb.

“The numbers put things into perspective,” Campbell says. “The bracket’s superior tensile strength shows the titanium print can withstand significantly higher loads than required, when the aircraft is in flight. This helped convince the regulators that AM was more than up to the job.”

After Tronosjet demonstrated the part’s strength, safety, and quality, the engine bracket was eventually certified by the FAA and has received Parts Manufacturer Approval (PMA). Certification demonstrates the bracket received adequate testing in line with FAA standards for airworthiness and means Tronosjet can now produce and supply it to customers. Significantly, it’s one of the first FAA PMA certified metallic AM components – giving Tronosjet a competitive edge.

“We’re grateful for Renishaw’s engineering prowess and support – it delivered great products, which have been critical for us achieving certification,” Campbell concludes.

Renishaw
https://www.renishaw.com

June 2025
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