Friction Stir Welder for Advanced Research, Education, & Process Development - Model GG-7

Ғылым және технология

Пікірлер: 18

  • @gianluca.g
    @gianluca.g Жыл бұрын

    Proof that with sufficient energy you can walk through solid walls. ..

  • @iac4357
    @iac4357 Жыл бұрын

    Holy Moly ! So it weld by passing THROUGH the Work !

  • @pigsonthewinguk
    @pigsonthewinguk6 жыл бұрын

    Please would you use an open licence (e.g. CC by-sa) so that video can be used on Wikipedia?

  • @ahmedlotfy8972
    @ahmedlotfy89723 жыл бұрын

    Thank you.

  • @mbongenibuthelezi1088
    @mbongenibuthelezi10885 жыл бұрын

    👍 What is the Nominal (Min & Max) speed used for this process, surely the torque it's very important, how do to control its

  • @vibha_shsinha
    @vibha_shsinha7 жыл бұрын

    Super

  • @noteda6361
    @noteda63616 ай бұрын

    That's insane

  • @moathalmkdadi3974
    @moathalmkdadi39744 жыл бұрын

    What type of material we can use for carbon steel in tool ?

  • @ActionScripter
    @ActionScripter6 жыл бұрын

    What's the audio track used here?

  • @loki7389
    @loki7389 Жыл бұрын

    wow

  • @davidflorez2001
    @davidflorez20016 жыл бұрын

    U would think it's cheaper to have stuff like that extruded

  • @steveleake

    @steveleake

    6 жыл бұрын

    that's only a test piece. What they're looking at is joining 2 large plates, in this case 25mm thick, single-pass, no prep, and high quality weld. Examples would be say 8 x 4 sheets etc. We work on extrusion presses all the time and the process is suitable for long, relatively low area items, such as tubes etc. The Friction-Stir process was invented by The Welding Institute, of Cambridge, UK some years ago. Used by Aerospace manufacturers for butt welding of Aluminium (sorry, US guys) wing panels etc previously rivetted due to weld ripple problems with TIG/MIG processes.

  • @Newera2047
    @Newera20472 жыл бұрын

    18 clamps required? If it's required 18 clamps for just 1 feet... Then How to weld Real job

  • @Ali.g.97
    @Ali.g.972 жыл бұрын

    No freaking way this brutish cnc router type process is stronger than a conventional weld... Chunking the material up and mixing it around?? I gotta imagine it's porous as hell

  • @D-One

    @D-One

    2 жыл бұрын

    It is since a lot less heat means the metal properties dont change, they use this a lot in rockets. SmarterEveryDay has a video about "how rockets are made" where the advantages are explained if you're interrested.

  • @TheExplosiveGuy

    @TheExplosiveGuy

    Жыл бұрын

    It actually is stronger, stronger than the base metal itself, as odd as it sounds. The metal isn't actually melted per-se like a conventional arc welder would, the metal goes through what is called plasticization where the immense forces involved smears the metal together under immense pressure to join them. I was a QC inspector in an industrial machine shop some years back that made friction stir welders for Blue Origin, and I spoke quite a bit with the engineer of the project who told me that friction stir welders have changed the game for rocket manufacturing, the weld is actually _stronger_ than the surrounding billet material, he showed me some videos and pictures of him explosively testing the weld strength between two 10' x 3' x 1.5" thick aluminum plates, which were welded on one of the machines we made, they loaded up some obscene amount of C4 along one side of it then blew it up. All they found was a shitload of small aluminum fragments from the plates and a 10' long twisted snake of friction stir weld bead.

  • @slevinshafel9395

    @slevinshafel9395

    9 ай бұрын

    @@D-One than i need see it.

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