A 17.5 foot long, 5.5 foot wide and 1.5 foot tall the 3D printed aircraft design tool has earned the title of largest solid 3D printed item by Guinness World Records.

The 1,650 lb. apparatus known as a trim-and-drill tool is comparable in length to a large sport utility vehicle and will ultimately be tested for use in building the Boeing 777X passenger jet. Basically the tool will be used to secure the jet’s composite wing skin for drilling and machining before assembly according to researchers at the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ONRL) who developed the tool.

+More on Network World: The hottest 3D printing projects+

ONRL said it printed the tool in only 30 hours using carbon fiber and ABS thermoplastic composite materials.

“The existing, more expensive metallic tooling option we currently use comes from a supplier and typically takes three months to manufacture using conventional techniques,” said Leo Christodoulou, Boeing’s director of structures and materials in a statement. “Additively manufactured tools, such as the 777X wing trim tool, will save energy, time, labor and production cost and are part of our overall strategy to apply 3D printing technology in key production areas.”

According to ONRL, the tool was 3D printed on the lab’s Big Area Additive Manufacturing machine and Guinness World Records judge Michael Empric measured the trim tool, proved it exceeded the required minimum of 0.3 cubic meters, or approximately 10.6 cubic feet, and announced the new record title.

+More on Network World: Wicked cool 3D printer creations+

ORNL researchers said that after the lab completes verification testing, Boeing plans to use the trim-and-drill tool in the company’s new production facility in St. Louis and provide information back to ORNL on the tool’s performance.

Boeing Boeing 777X

Production of the 777X is scheduled to begin in 2017 and delivery is targeted for 2020.

Check out these other hot stories:

Cisco buys into containers with Container X acquisition

8 cool “habitable” planets

Cisco: US Trade Rep. backing Arista product import ban

FBI: Bank robbery? There’s an app for that

Much ado about the ransomware scourge

US senators want airline IT meltdowns to end

Prize competitions for tough IT, high-tech problems all the rage

Cisco to jettison 5,500 jobs, will reinvest in cloud, IoT & more

Cisco uncovers security threat in industrial control system

Open vSwitch finds new home at the Linux Foundation

What will space living look like? NASA picks 6 habitat prototypes

Branch office links, big bandwidth needs drive SD-WAN evolution