Investors are continuing to rally behind the call to reindustrialize American industry, this time by building out a $260 million war chest for automated manufacturing startup Hadrian to scale its factory footprint and make even more machine parts. Hadrian's aim is to modernize American manufacturing by leveraging advanced automation to deliver mass-produced parts for aerospace and defense companies at a fraction of the time. It's a huge change to the status quo: a manufacturing industry that's largely populated by dozens of small machining shops run by an aging workforce. Hadrian's first target was high-precision CNC machining, a manufacturing process that makes parts to extremely tight tolerances ' often measured in the microns, not millimeters (a single human hair is anywhere from 50 to 120 microns in thickness). Now, in addition to that core CNC offering, the company is getting ready to diversify into welding, casting, additive, and other processes, Hadrian founder and CEO Chris...
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