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16,749,776 views • 1 year ago •via X (Twitter)

10 Comments

Tyler grass's profile picture
Tyler grass1 year ago

Third one was induction heating, not friction welding, and last one was the shittiest friction "welding" possible

CannotBeBlank's profile picture
CannotBeBlank1 year ago

I hadn't seen glass fused using this method before

TypicalWhiteDude's profile picture
TypicalWhiteDude1 year ago

The legos will just stick together, you don’t have to weld them

@Daveleveraction's profile picture
@Daveleveraction1 year ago

The third one was induction welding; not friction welding.

Fogo de Santelmo's profile picture
Fogo de Santelmo1 year ago

Although the object was rotating, this method is electrical induction heating, not friction.

87 thoughts.'s profile picture
87 thoughts.1 year ago

Isn’t the third one just quenching? Not sure how it’s friction welding.

curious side of 𝕏's profile picture
curious side of 𝕏1 year ago

Linear friction welding joins two parts by pressing them together while one moves rapidly back and forth

Jeff's profile picture
Jeff1 year ago

Helps to preheat the two parts. The one before the Lego was induction heating.

Doolly Noted ✏️'s profile picture
Doolly Noted ✏️1 year ago

Note: Friction welding joins metals by heating them through friction. One part spins while pressing against a stationary part, generating heat until the metals bond. This process is fast, energy-efficient, and creates strong, clean welds. It's ideal for dissimilar metals and materials like steel, aluminum, and titanium, commonly used in automotive, aerospace, and manufacturing industries.

SonOfADeadMeme's profile picture
SonOfADeadMeme1 year ago

That's an induction heater

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