In article ,
"William Wixon" wrote:
wrote in message
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On Apr 24, 8:50 am, engineman wrote:
On a recent episode of "factory made" on the manufacture of light rail
cars they mentioned that the frames were made of what they called
"weathering steel" which was described as an alloy which only develop
surface rust which prevents further rusting.
If there is such a thing, I'm wondering why they don't use it on
automobile frames?
What advantages would it have over galvanized steel?
Engineman
They made Aloha Stadium out of it and found out it doesn't work in
Hawaii.
Karl
they're replacing corten guardrails in new york
(when i saw this article last year i thought "this is a god damned scam,
somebody's brother's uncle is a metals distributor and his nephew owns a
scrap yard". they're pumping it up in the name of safety so they can blow
wads of money.)
http://www.recordonline.com/apps/pbc...NEWS/903180343
My recollection is that it turned out that Cor-Ten doesn't handle salt well.
Joe Gwinn