QTREX begins AME implementation and delivers system to US defence customer
Updated
Updated · USA TODAY · May 8
QTREX begins AME implementation and delivers system to US defence customer
7 articles · Updated · USA TODAY · May 8
The Israeli quantum unit of Inspira Technologies said one project is with a top-10 US company in AI, computing infrastructure and platform technologies.
QTREX is using additively manufactured electronics acquired in April 2026 to tackle quantum computing's wiring and thermal-management bottleneck in cryogenic systems.
Inspira says the platform came with more than $200m in prior R&D, as the industry shifts from development toward deployment and scaling quantum machines.
Can a $21M company's pivot to quantum 'plumbing' solve a bottleneck that billion-dollar giants face?
Is 3D printing the key to finally scaling quantum computers beyond their current qubit limits?
As the quantum race shifts to infrastructure, who will win the critical battle to build its 'plumbing'?
In April 2026, QTREX successfully deployed its advanced Additively Manufactured Electronics (AME) platform to a Tier-1 U.S. defense customer, marking a key shift from development to real-world quantum applications. The AME technology uses multi-material 3D printing to create compact, integrated electronic structures that reduce thermal load and electromagnetic interference, enhancing qubit coherence and enabling scalable quantum systems. This deployment validated the technology and supported QTREX's strategic pivot into quantum computing, led by experienced leadership. With a growing quantum market projected to reach $72 billion by 2035, QTREX leverages defense validation to expand into adjacent high-tech sectors, backed by a recurring revenue model from proprietary consumables.