Linear Friction Welding is the solid-state process of choice for aerospace blisks, titanium structural components and precision assemblies where joint strength must match parent material — without melting, without filler, and without the limitations of geometry that restrict rotary friction welding.
In LFW, one workpiece oscillates linearly against a stationary second workpiece under high axial pressure. Friction generates localised heat — material softens, plasticises, and is expelled. When oscillation stops, forge pressure holds the parts in perfect alignment until cooled. No filler metal, no shielding gas, no arc.
The two workpieces are brought into contact under initial axial force. The oscillating part begins its linear reciprocating motion — typically at 25–100 Hz and amplitudes of 1–3 mm.
Friction heats the interface. Asperities are worn away and surface oxides are disrupted. Material begins to soften. Temperature rises to 60–90% of the melting point — the plastic range — without ever going liquid.
Material in the plasticised layer flows outward as flash, expelling oxides, contaminants and any surface defects. Both workpieces shorten axially. A continuous fresh metallic interface is maintained throughout this phase.
Oscillation stops. The two parts are brought to perfect alignment and forge pressure is applied or increased during cool-down. The result is a fine-grained, hot-forged microstructure across the entire weld interface — with no defects associated with melting or solidification.
Machining a titanium blisk from a single forging is the traditional route — but it is expensive, slow, and wasteful. A blisk rough forging might have a buy-to-fly ratio of 10:1 or worse — meaning 90% of the expensive titanium billet ends up as chips on the floor.
LFW turns that on its head. Individual blades and disk are separately forged near-net-shape, then joined. Material savings of 20–30% are typical. Machining cost drops because less material needs removing. And with LFW, you can use different alloys for blade and disk — optimised for each role — which is impossible when machining from a single forging.
For aircraft structural components — wing ribs, seat rails, brackets, frames — LFW enables similarly dramatic buy-to-fly improvements over machining from plate.
| Factor | LFW | Machine from solid | Fusion weld |
|---|---|---|---|
| Solidification defects | None (solid state) | None | Porosity, cracks |
| Joint strength | = parent material | = parent material | HAZ reduction |
| Dissimilar materials | Yes — blade/disk | No | Limited |
| Titanium in open air | Yes | Yes (machining) | Inert gas required |
| Forged microstructure | Yes — fine grain | From billet | Cast microstructure |
| Material wastage | Low (near-net shape) | Very high (chips) | Low |
| Complex part geometry | Yes | Yes | Limited |
| Filler metal required | No | No | Yes |
The intense plastic deformation and recrystallisation during LFW produces an equiaxed, fine-grain microstructure across the weld zone. Tensile and fatigue properties equal or exceed the parent material — suitable for flight-critical rotating parts.
Titanium's affinity for oxygen makes fusion welding in air impossible. LFW avoids the liquid phase entirely — so titanium blisks, structural clips and brackets can be welded on the shop floor without vacuum chambers or inert gas flooding.
LFW enables blade and disk to be made from different alloys — each optimised for its specific role. The fan blade material can be selected for aerodynamic performance; the disk material for creep resistance and fatigue life. Impossible with machining from solid.
By joining near-net-shape preforms rather than machining from solid, LFW reduces material consumption by 20–30% on typical blisk programmes. Flash that is expelled during welding is recycled — not scrapped. Lower buy-to-fly ratio means a better cost per part.
No filler wire, no flux, no shielding gas, no laser gas. The only consumable is the workpiece material itself — a fraction of which becomes flash. This simplifies the process bill-of-materials and removes a category of defect source from the joint.
Conventional bladed disk assemblies use dovetail or fir-tree mechanical fixings — which are a source of fatigue initiation and allow air leakage at the blade-disk interface. LFW blisks have a continuous, solid metallic bond at the blade root — no air path, no fretting, better aerodynamic efficiency.
All ETA Linear Friction Welding machines are engineered-to-order around your component geometry, oscillation frequency requirement, axial force range and production volume. Below are representative configurations.
Designed for the production and repair of aero-engine blisks — joining individual blades to disk — and for small aerostructural components such as brackets, clips and seat-rail stubs. Servo-hydraulic oscillation drive with precision alignment and full in-process weld parameter monitoring.
For joining larger structural titanium components — seat rails, wing ribs, lintels, fuselage frames and thick-section structural joints. Higher oscillation and forge force capacity with extended work-envelope. Linear actuator-driven forge with closed-loop force control.
The established LFW application. Titanium and nickel superalloy blisks for compressor and fan stages of aero-engines — Eurofighter, commercial turbofans, helicopter engines. Also used for replacing damaged individual blades on existing blisks (blade swap / repair) without replacing the entire disk.
Titanium structural components for aircraft fuselage and wing — seat rails, floor beams, wing ribs, lintels, hinges, fittings, brackets and fuselage frames. LFW reduces buy-to-fly ratios dramatically versus machining from thick plate or forgings.
Military airframe structural joining, armour joining (steel and titanium armour plates), high-integrity load-bearing brackets for rotorcraft and fighter aircraft. The solid-state nature and no-consumables approach align well with defence production and field-repair requirements.
Heavy-duty steel chain links with two-part construction joined by LFW — combining the material efficiency of a two-piece forging with a full solid-state metallurgical bond. High-load chain applications in mining, marine, snow chains and industrial lifting.
Any precision assembly requiring a full butt joint weld across a non-circular, complex cross-section — where rotary friction welding geometry cannot be applied. Suitable for rectangular section bars, T-sections, blade profiles and other non-round interfaces.
Universities, research institutes and tier-1 manufacturers developing new LFW applications for next-generation materials — nickel superalloy blisks, high-entropy alloys, titanium aluminides, bimetallic structural joints. ETA's R&D facility supports process parameter development using customer materials.
Share your component drawing, material and production volume. ETA will carry out a no-cost feasibility assessment and recommend the right machine configuration.