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§ Private Profile · Addison, TX, USA
Aerospace company developing 3D-printed rocket propulsion systems and propellants for defense applications, focused on missile defense.
Based in Addison, Texas, Firehawk Aerospace develops advanced rocket propulsion systems by utilizing 3D-printing technologies to manufacture solid and hybrid rocket propellants and motors. The company's proprietary manufacturing process addresses critical defense supply chain bottlenecks by reducing propellant production time from the traditional 15 to 60 days down to just six hours. Firehawk Aerospace secures government contracts and strategic partnerships within the aerospace and defense sectors, working alongside recognizable entities such as the U.S. Army, NASA, and Raytheon. The enterprise is currently expanding its operational footprint with a $22 million investment into a 40,000-square-foot production facility in Lawton, Oklahoma, which is expected to create 100 new jobs and yield an annual capacity of one million pounds of propellant. Firehawk Aerospace was founded in 2020 by Will Edwards, Steve Edwards, and Ron Jones.
Firehawk Aerospace has raised $182.2M across 5 funding rounds.
Firehawk Aerospace has raised $182.2M in total across 5 funding rounds.
Firehawk Aerospace has raised $182.2M in total across 5 funding rounds.
Firehawk Aerospace's investors include Donald Trump Jr., Decisive Point, Draper Associates, Michal Strnad, Stellar Ventures, Star Castle VC, Addition, Afore Capital, C2 Investment, Gradient Ventures, Not Boring Capital, Paradigm.
Firehawk Aerospace has raised $182.2M across 5 funding rounds. Most recently, it raised $100.0M Other Equity in November 2025.
| Date | Round | Lead Investors | Other Investors | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nov 19, 2025 | $100M Venture Round | — | — | Announced |
| Sep 25, 2025 | $60M Series C | Donald Trump JR. | Decisive Point, Draper Associates, Michal Strnad, Stellar Ventures | Announced |
| Sep 1, 2022 | $19M Series A | Star Castle VC | Addition, Afore Capital, C2 Investment, Gradient Ventures, NOT Boring Capital, Paradigm, Saga, Seven Seven SIX, Thirty Five Ventures, Todd And Rahul's Angel Fund, Colin Carrier, Eric WU, John Collison, Kelvin Beachum JR., MAX Mullen, SAM Altman, Capital Factory, Cathexis Ventures, Draper Associates, Echo Investment Capital, Goff Capital, Hemisphere Ventures, Plains Ventures, RTX Ventures, Stellar Ventures, Victorum Capital | Announced |
| Jan 29, 2021 | $1.2M Seed Plus | Colby Harlow | — | Announced |
| Sep 14, 2020 | $2M Seed | — | Achieve Capital, Harlow Capital Management, Victorum Capital | Announced |
Firehawk Aerospace is a Texas-based propulsion technology company developing scalable solid and hybrid rocket motors using 3D-printed propellant to modernize U.S. defense manufacturing.[1][3][4] It serves defense contractors and the U.S. military by replacing outdated WWII-era production with faster, cheaper, and adaptable additive manufacturing systems that address supply chain vulnerabilities.[1][2] The company solves critical bottlenecks in rocket propulsion, enabling precise fuel grain design, efficient combustion, throttling control, and rapid U.S.-based scaling amid geopolitical tensions.[1] Growth momentum includes a strategic investment from Hanwha Defense USA, expansion to a 340-acre facility in Lawton, Oklahoma, 13 patents (with more pending), completed flight tests, and collaborations with partners like Fairlead, Juggerbot, and FISTA.[1][5]
Firehawk Aerospace was founded in 2019 by Ronald Jones, Will Edwards, Chris Stoker (Co-Founder and CEO), and Aaron Babbitt (Co-Founder and CTO), blending expertise in aerospace, materials science, and advanced manufacturing.[1][2][3] The idea emerged from recognizing the defense industry's reliance on legacy solid rocket methods unable to meet modern demands, prompting a shift to 3D printing for propellant grains in hybrid and solid rocket systems.[1][4] Early traction built through development of a 42,000 sq ft Texas manufacturing facility, a 30 sq mile launch range, multi-acre test site, initial flight tests (one completed, six more scheduled), and patent filings for proprietary solid propellant materials.[1]
Firehawk rides the wave of defense tech resurgence, fueled by U.S. efforts to counter geopolitical threats from China and Russia through domestic manufacturing revival.[1] Timing aligns with surging demand for resilient supply chains post-Ukraine conflict and amid additive manufacturing's maturation in aerospace, where 3D printing cuts costs and lead times versus legacy processes.[1][4] Market forces like federal funding for hypersonics, missiles, and space dominance favor Firehawk, positioning it alongside peers like Anduril and Shield AI in AI-enabled defense innovation.[2] It influences the ecosystem by partnering with integrators, securing investments like Hanwha Defense USA's, and enabling faster warfighter readiness.[1][5]
Firehawk is poised for acceleration with its Oklahoma facility ramp-up, additional flight tests, and Hanwha backing to scale production for defense primes.[1][5] Trends like hypersonic proliferation, space domain awareness, and AM adoption will propel demand, potentially leading to contracts with primes like Lockheed or Raytheon. Its influence may evolve from niche innovator to key supplier, securing U.S. propulsion edge—redefining defense manufacturing as promised from day one.[1]