The team at Spectrum Technologies will watch the conclusion of the Artemis II mission this weekend knowing they played an important role
A laser company in South Wales played an important role in the Artemis II space mission after their advanced technology was used on the Orion spacecraft. Spectrum Technologies in Bridgend design and manufacture laser equipment which is used by teams in America to label the wiring on spacecrafts and aircrafts, including Orion.
There is 20 miles of wiring on Orion, made up of 2,600 individual pieces which have all been marked by Spectrum Technologies’ lasers.
“Each wire must be marked along its entire length at intervals of just a few inches with a unique alphanumeric code,” said Peter Dickinson, chairman and chief technology officer.. It’s extremely complex electrical wiring,” he said. “They all have to be identified with a unique code otherwise it is a gigantic mess”.
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Mr Dickinson said this system is the “critical first step in producing the spacecraft’s wiring harness,” and that their company is “the number one global provider for this specialist equipment. The global standard.”
Lasers from Spectrum Technologies has been used in all of the Artemis programmes and Mr Dickinson has said they will be used in Artemis III when astronauts return to the surface of the moon for the first time since 1972.
Mr Dickinson and the team at Spectrum Technologies are all excited to watch the Artemis programme succeed and to know they made an impact.
“The whole company has been watching what has been going on and we are all excited to be part of this pivotal moment of space exploration,” said Mr Dickinson.
“I remember as a teenager watching Apollo 11 landing on the moon. It is thrilling to be involved in this latest programme to take humans back to the moon.”
Lasers from the Bridgend-based company have been used in probes that have gone to Mars and in one called Lucy which is on a 12-year mission to Jupiter with the aim of discovering more about how our solar system was created.









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