NEWS & EVENTS

MTI Announces Partnership with LIFT to Deliver North America’s Largest Linear Friction Welder to Detroit

First of Its Kind in the U.S. Linear Friction Welding Machine to Use Aerospace Technology for Full-Size Demonstrator Parts in Automotive and Transportation Industries

Contacts:
Joe Steele
LIFT
313-309-9132 (office)
jsteele@lift.technology

Shane Doehrmann
MTI
574-233-9490 ext 119
Doehrmann.Shane@mtiwelding.com
Download the Press Release


SOUTH BEND, IN – Manufacturing Technology Inc., (MTI) announced it will develop North America’s largest Linear Friction Welder, in terms of force capacity and tooling envelope, and deliver it to LIFT – Lightweight Innovations for Tomorrow – for use in lightweight metals research and development projects, based in Detroit.

Poised to be the first of its kind of equipment in the United States, the LF35-75 welder, currently under development and set for completion in spring of 2018, will be housed in LIFT’s Corktown manufacturing center. The machine will bring the same linear friction welding technology used in aerospace to achieve lightweighting in blisks and Integrally Bladed Rotors (IBR) in aircraft engines to the automotive industry.

“We find this machine to be incredibly valuable for the future of high-tech manufacturing,” said Dan Adams, MTI president and chief technology officer. “It is so vital to the field, in fact, that we came to a cost-sharing agreement with LIFT in order to bring greater industry accessibility and capacity for future development work.”

LIFT, one of the founding members of Manufacturing USA, part of the federal government’s National Network of Manufacturing Innovation program, is a public-private partnership designed to help develop and deploy advanced lightweight metal manufacturing technologies, and implement education and training programs to better prepare the workforce of today and tomorrow.

Acquiring this machine is part of LIFT’s recent $50 million investment, along with IACMI – The Composites Institute, in their shared manufacturing facility in Detroit. With MTI and LIFT sharing a joint vision for the future of U.S. manufacturing, manufacturers for the first time in history will be able to weld full size demonstrator parts in the United States.

“Having access to a machine such as this linear friction welder will increase our light-weighting research and development exponentially,” said Lawrence E. Brown, executive director, LIFT. “We are thrilled to have MTI as a partner and thankful for their willingness to develop and deliver such an impressive piece of equipment for us here in Detroit.”

Linear Friction Welding: Transforming Automotive
Linear Friction Welding, a young technology within the automotive market, is gaining momentum with the increased need for light-weighting and advanced alloy utilization combined with decreasing capital costs.

Applications within the automotive market that are currently being investigated or
developed using linear friction welding technology include structural members,
such as chassis and doors, of metallic alloys. Additional applications consist of
energy absorption members, such as crash cans, where generally a tubular structure is joined to a plate structure. Other applications may also include any other joint of two dissimilar, non-axisymmetric metallic components that need to be joined, with the components being of either like or dissimilar metals.

The LF35-75: An Amazing Machine
The LF35-75 machine significantly eliminates wasted materials and postmachining
by producing Near Net Shape parts utilizing Linear Friction Welding technology. This technology also gives LIFT members the ability to join preferentially lighter or stronger materials to specific locations on the subject part, taking advantage of friction welding’s ability to join challenging and dissimilar metals. This reduction in cost and increase in capability will allow LIFT members to implement highly engineered materials that offer superior performance at a reduced weight for better fuel efficiency and handling in any variety of vehicular applications.

At 35 tons of oscillator process force and 75 tons of friction force, MTI has
optimally balanced the proportion of axes capabilities for the LF35-75 in order to
maximize its capability to produce Near Net Shape parts for the breadth of markets and vehicular segments represented by LIFT membership. Working with other industry experts, MTI leveraged the experience of EWI for the design of the LF35-75.

ABOUT MTI
Having delivered more linear friction welders than any other company in history, MTI has established itself as a leader in friction and resistance welding, including Rotary Friction, Linear Friction and Friction Stir Welding technologies. In addition, MTI has delivered machines to Boeing, GE, Rolls- Royce, Pratt and Whitney, Federal Mogul, and many of their tier one suppliers. A family owned business founded in 1926, MTI employs 225 people in their South Bend, United Kingdom, and China locations. For more information on MTI, and its family of world-class friction welding technologies, visit www.mtiwelding.com, follow us on twitter: @mtiwelding, or visit us on
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/manufacturing-technology-inc

ABOUT LIFT
LIFT is a Detroit-based, public-private partnership committed to the development and deployment of advanced lightweight metal manufacturing technologies, and implementing education and training initiatives to better prepare the workforce today and in the future. LIFT is one of the founding institutes of Manufacturing USA, and is funded in part by the Department of Defense with management through the Office of Naval Research. Visit www.lift.technology or follow on Twitter @NewsFromLIFT to learn more.