Enter the component details — part type, materials, geometry, operating point — to generate a starting parameter set for continuous-drive rotary friction welding. Reference data for all supported materials is included below.
DisclaimerAll calculated values are guidance only and intended as a starting point for trials and procedure development. Griffiths Engineering Solutions Ltd accepts no responsibility for outcomes resulting from their use. It is recommendedthat all welds are qualified to a recognised standard (e.g. ISO 15620, AWS C6.1) before production.
1. Part type
Select the joint geometry.
2. Interface preparation
How are the faces prepared? Affects ramp times and initial torque.
3. Materials
Loading material data…
Custom material parameters
Enter values from your WPS, customer spec, or trial data.
4. Recommended weld range zone
Select the preferred weld range zone based on published recommendations.
Lower third
Lower forces and speeds
Mid range
Centre of recommended window
Upper third
Higher forces and speeds
5. Material welding ranges
Auto-populated from the overlap of both materials' published ranges. Switch to Custom to override these for trial-tuning or supplier-spec work — the strategy slider above will then pick within your custom window, and all forces, speeds, and times will be recalculated.
Range values for established materials come from published friction welding reference data. Any material derived from engineering estimate is clearly tagged in the material info.
Friction force
–t
–kN
Forge force
–t
–kN
Surface speed
–m/s
–
6. Geometry
25 mm
0 mm
7. Pre-weld lengths and finished length
Burn-off is estimated from Part 1 + Part 2 − Finished length, split between the friction phase (~80%) and forge upset (~20%).
Enter your component details above, then click Generate Parameters.
Friction welding parameter sheet
Generated — · Griffiths Engineering Solutions Ltd
Part type:—
Interface:—
Weld range zone:—
Rotating material:—
Stationary material:—
OD / ID:—
Welding cross-section:—
Pre-weld / finished length:—
Calibration confidence:—
Recommended welding parameters
Block A below is the machine setpoint sheet — these are the values generally used by a friction welder to create a successful weldment. Block B contains derived process insight (forces in kN, surface speeds, torque, energy, predicted cycle) for sizing and sanity checks but is not entered into the machine.
High confidence— parameters within typical engineering experience for this size range.
Block A — Machine setpoints
Component pre-weld length tolerances
Min pre-weld length (Part 1 + Part 2 − tol)
—mm
Max pre-weld length (Part 1 + Part 2 + tol)
—mm
Weldment length tolerances
Min post-weld length (Finished − tol)
—mm
Max post-weld length (Finished + tol)
—mm
Burn-off
Recommended burn-off minimum (GES guidance)
—mm
Calculated burn-off
—mm
Burn-off rate (est.)
—mm/s
Forces
1st friction force (P1)
—kN
2nd friction force (P2)
—kN
Forge force (P3)
—kN
1st friction force (P1)
—t
2nd friction force (P2)
—t
Forge force (P3)
—t
Times
The ramp time is included in the friction time — i.e. friction time is measured from force ramp start to end of phase.
1st friction — ramp
—s
1st friction — total
—s
2nd friction — ramp
—s
2nd friction — total (estimated)
—s
Forge delay
—s
Forge duration
—s
Speeds
1st friction speed (N1)
—rpm
2nd friction speed (N2)
—rpm
Monitors
Watchdog thresholds — the machine flags or aborts if the actual process drifts outside these bounds.
2nd friction monitor force
90% of P2
—kN
—t
2nd friction min time (t₂ − 3 s)
—s
2nd friction max time (t₂ + 3 s)
—s
2nd friction monitor speed (90% of N2)
—rpm
Forge monitor force
90% of P3
—kN
—t
Forge max ramp time (forge ramp + 1 s)
—s
Deceleration max time (decel + 1 s)
—s
Block B — Process insight & machine demand
Derived values — useful for sizing the machine and sanity-checking the procedure, but not entered into the welder.
Contact area
Contact area
—mm²
—————————
Surface speeds & machine demand
1st friction surface speed
—m/s
2nd friction surface speed
—m/s
Engineering detail ges
Diagnostic numbers used for drive sizing and weld-physics sanity-checking. Hidden from operators by default.
Peak spindle power
—kW
—
Average spindle power
—kW
—
Peak friction torque (1F)
—N·m
Heat input rate (1F)
—kW
Energy delivered (1F)
—kJ
Predicted T at end of 1F
—°C
Time to visible glow
—
Machine response times
Mechanical response times — the welder runs these as fast as the hydraulics and spindle inertia allow. Shown for sizing / sanity-check; not programmed.
Forge ramp (estimated)
—s
Deceleration time (estimated)
—s
Length budget & totals
Forge upset
—mm
Total length loss
—mm
Total friction time
—s
Total cycle time (approx.)
—s
Predicted weld cycle
Schematic of force, spindle speed, and displacement against time — based on the generated parameters above. Idealised; real-process traces will be noisier.
Disclaimer: All calculated values are guidance only and intended as a starting point for trials and procedure development. Griffiths Engineering Solutions Ltd accepts no responsibility for outcomes resulting from their use. It is recommended that all welds are qualified to a recognised standard (e.g. ISO 15620, AWS C6.1) before production.
▶Show process parameter detail
Values the calculator chose, with the underlying pressures and friction coefficient used for torque/power.
Parameter
Value
Source
P1 pressure
— MPa
30% of P2 (light pre-heat, prevents spin-ups)
P2 pressure
— MPa
From material range × operating point
P3 (forge) pressure
— MPa
From forge range × op point; enforced ≥ 1.15 × P2
N1 — 1st friction speed
— rpm
1.4 × N2 (higher speed for cleaning action)
N2 — 2nd friction speed
— rpm
From target surface speed at OD (P2 stage)
Target surface speed (P2)
— m/s
From material range × operating point
μ for 1F peak (cold start)
0.45
Dry steel-on-steel asperity contact; drives peak motor demand
μ for 2F average (steady state)
0.25
Plasticised hot interface; representative of bulk weld cycle
Glow temperature target
550 °C
Dull red, visible in shop lighting
Burn-off split (friction / forge)
80% / 20%
Typical industry default
Weld cycle phases
1 — Initial / dry friction
High μ, asperity contact, rapid temperature rise. Torque peaks early.
The level of change required varies for every situation, and this tool is set deliberately conservatively. These are suggestions to consider — you must make your own decision on whether to try them.
Any damage, loss, or injury resulting from applying these changes is not the responsibility of Griffiths Engineering Solutions Ltd in any way.