Velo3D's Livermore Expansion Shows Why Titanium AM Buyers Need a Site-Transfer Release File
Velo3D's June 30, 2026 announcement of a new 288,747-square-foot Livermore production campus is not a titanium order by itself. The useful signal for titanium buyers is more specific: metal additive manufacturing is being organized around a handoff from engineering, process development and qualification into production-scale execution. That handoff is where many titanium procurement risks sit. Velo3D says its Fremont headquarters will remain the center for research and development, applications engineering, process development, customer collaboration, prototyping and qualification, while Livermore becomes the primary production and manufacturing center. The company also says the two facilities are intended to help customers move from concept and qualification through production with one partner. For buyers of Ti-6Al-4V parts, pressure components, aerospace brackets, energy hardware, medical-adjacent components or complex machined titanium products, that is a useful moment to ask a narrower question: what evidence proves that the qualified route survived the site transfer? Velo3D lists Ti-6Al-4V among its additive manufacturing materials and describes it as an alpha-beta titanium alloy used in jet engines, gas turbines, pressure vessels and biomechanical components. That material range is exactly why a production campus announcement should not be read as automatic product release. Titanium buyers still need the evidence bridge between the route that was qualified and the route that will ship parts. The News Is About Production Discipline, Not Only Capacity The headline numbers are large. Velo3D says the Livermore campus includes about 270,000 square feet of manufacturing space, 36-foot clear heights, nearly 10 million cubic feet of manufacturing volume, capacity for 40+ large-format systems at launch and infrastructure to scale beyond 100 systems. It also says the two campuses are expected to encompass 125 machines. Those numbers matter because they show the industry moving from isolated qualification projects toward repeated production. But repeated production is not the same as repeated acceptance. In titanium, the buyer's exposure sits in the gap between the platform claim and the released product file. If the quoted part depends on a specific powder lot family, build orientation, support strategy, scan parameter, oxygen-control window, post-processing route, heat treatment, machining allowance, NDT method or FAI record, then a larger production site must inherit more than the CAD file. It must inherit the controlled route. The Site-Transfer Release FileA titanium site-transfer release file is the buyer's evidence map for moving from a qualified AM route to production at another campus, machine group or manufacturing partner (see our earlier reads on the AM data-package release evidence and the qualification-to-rate file).Evidence layer What buyers should verify Why it mattersQualified baseline Part number, revision, alloy, application boundary and qualification basis Prevents a production quote from borrowing confidence from a different part or routeSite role Which site owns qualification, production, post-processing, inspection and final release Clarifies who controls each step after the handoffMaterial scope Ti-6Al-4V grade, powder source, lot definition, reuse rule, storage and contamination controls Keeps material identity from drifting when volume increasesMachine and software equivalence Machine family, build envelope, software version, print preparation file and parameter set Shows whether production uses the same controlled manufacturing logicAtmosphere and process controls Oxygen and humidity limits, recoating behavior, calibration, monitoring and exception records Makes the production environment auditable, not merely availablePost-processing route Stress relief, HIP when required, heat treatment, machining, surface finishing and cleaning Avoids treating a printed shape as a released titanium part too earlyInspection and release FAI, dimensional inspection, NDT or CT plan, mechanical test basis, MTR/MTC language and concession rules Connects part acceptance to the shipped lotChange trigger What requires buyer notification or requalification Prevents silent changes during scale-upThis framework matters even when the supplier is strong. A capable supplier can still make a buyer-facing file weak if the purchase order does not state what must remain unchanged after transfer. Where Buyers Should Be Cautious The Livermore announcement supports a production-readiness conversation, but it does not disclose a specific titanium part approval, customer drawing, acceptance dataset or shipped-lot certificate. That limit is important. The right buyer conclusion is not "Velo3D capacity equals titanium part approval." The better conclusion is that the market is creating more places where titanium AM routes can move from qualification into production, and each move needs a release bridge. The same caution applies to any metal AM capacity expansion. A new machine, a larger building, a bigger fleet or a domestic production claim can reduce schedule pressure only when the actual product form, route, inspection and release authority are tied to the order (see our read on audit-scope-to-order release evidence). For titanium buyers, the hard questions are practical:Is the Ti-6Al-4V route already qualified for this part family, or only for the machine platform? Does the production site use the same print file, parameter set and powder-control rule as the qualification site? Are post-processing and machining performed under the same release boundary? Which inspection record travels with the lot, and which record stays as internal process evidence? What site, software, powder, heat-treatment or inspection change would trigger buyer review?What Procurement Should Ask Before ReleaseBefore treating a production-scale titanium AM source as order-ready, procurement teams should request a site-transfer release file rather than a general capability deck. The file does not need to be long. It needs to be connected. A buyer should be able to follow one part number from the qualified baseline to material entry, build record, post-processing, machining, inspection, certificate wording and shipment identity. If the part moves from one site to another, the file should show exactly which controls moved with it and which controls were revalidated. That is the real buyer value in this week's news. A larger production campus can make metal AM more useful for titanium supply only when it makes the qualification-to-production handoff easier to audit — the same evidence logic we traced in the single-piece tank inspection map. Without that bridge, capacity is just capacity. With it, titanium buyers can compare AM suppliers on evidence, not only on machine count or headline square footage.