SpaceX Dragon 2 And Falcon 9 Block 5 3D Printer Model

Author: @
License: CC BY
File formats: step,stl
Download type: zip
Size:2.9 MB

The file 'SpaceX Dragon 2 And Falcon 9 Block 5 3D Printer Model' is (step,stl) file type, size is 2.9 MB.

Summary

Now with rocket! Tweaks and stand still in work. Print all at 10% for a ~1:100 scale model.

From Wikipedia:

Dragon 2 is a class of reusable spacecraft developed and manufactured by U.S. aerospace manufacturer SpaceX, intended as the successor to the Dragon cargo spacecraft. The spacecraft launches atop a Falcon 9 Block 5 rocket and returns via ocean splashdown. When compared to Dragon, Crew Dragon has larger windows, new flight computers and avionics, redesigned solar arrays, and a modified outer mold line.

The spacecraft has two planned variants – Crew Dragon, a human-rated capsule capable of carrying up to seven astronauts, and Cargo Dragon, an updated replacement for the original Dragon. Crew Dragon is equipped with an integrated launch escape system in a set of four side-mounted thruster pods with two SuperDraco engines each. Crew Dragon has been contracted to supply the International Space Station (ISS) with crew under the Commercial Crew Program, with the initial award occurring in October 2014 alongside Boeing CST-100 Starliner. Crew Dragon's first non-piloted test flight to the ISS launched in March 2019.

Cargo Dragon will supply the ISS with cargo under the Commercial Resupply Services-2 (CRS-2) after a January 2016 selection alongside Northrop Grumman Innovation Systems' Cygnus and Sierra Nevada Corporation's Dream Chaser. SpaceX's first CRS-2 mission with the Cargo Dragon is slated to occur in August 2020 after SpaceX's final CRS-20 mission with the original Dragon spacecraft.[7]

The Crew Dragon capsule that flew in the first test flight was scheduled to be used in a flight abort test before it unexpectedly exploded during a test of its SuperDraco engines on 20 April 2019. An investigation into the explosion was completed on 15 July 2019 and resulted in changes to vehicle plumbing.[8]

The in-flight abort test was conducted on 19 January 2020 at 15:30 UTC. The first crewed launch with astronauts Robert L. Behnken and Douglas G. Hurley, is scheduled for 7 May 2020.[9]

assembly.step
dragon2.stl
f9_stage1-1.stl
f9_stage1-2.stl
f9_stage1-3.stl
f9_stage1-4.stl
f9_stand.stl
falcon_9_stage_1_complete.stl
falcon_9_stage_2_complete.stl