Machinery - The home of Production Engineering
 
 
Search :   Search Help    login

Linear friction welding machine for aerospace parts July 2008
 
The E100A is the first of a range of Thompson linear friction welding machines for producing aerospace components. It is designed for rapid linear friction welding of parts up to 10,000 mm².

Of an open arrangement design, the E100 can accommodate a vast array of component types, not just those used in the aerospace sector, but also in other areas including oil, gas and power generation.

Alan Shilton, Thompson’s managing director, explains: “This machine is ideal for producing near net shape components, such as blisks, with considerable savings in material and production costs. Typically, B2F ratios can be reduced from 10:1 to 2:1.”

He adds: “One of the major benefits of linear friction welding is that it can join parts horizontally and vertically, and in a wide variety of materials, as opposed to machining parts out of a solid.”
 
Author
Celia Cadwallader
 
Email this article
 
Bookmark this article using:
 
Del.icio.us digg reddit Facebook StumbleUpon
 
News Item
Linked Companies
 
 Thompson Friction Welding
 
 
News Item
Similar News Articles
 
  Trumpf free-to-attend workshops highlight business benefits
 
  MACH 2008 visitor numbers 21 per cent up
 
  Friction welder notches up £5 million in orders
 
  UK friction-weld technology scores hit in Germany
 
  Friction welder expands
 
 
News Item
Similar Technology Zone Articles
 
  Efficiency in the round
 
 
News Item
Related Product Launches
 
  Fine, clean and straight laser welding wires
 
  BevelJet’s moveable axle facilitates weld preparation options in up to five axes
 
  Static wall-mounted welding fume extractor
 
  Increased work envelope entry level additive manufacturing system
 
  Large working envelope welding on a small footprint
 
 
News Item
Related Industry Events
 
  EuroBLECH 2008
 
  JIMTOF 2008, Tokyo, Japan