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Metalworking (rec.crafts.metalworking) Discuss various aspects of working with metal, such as machining, welding, metal joining, screwing, casting, hardening/tempering, blacksmithing/forging, spinning and hammer work, sheet metal work. |
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Aluminum heat treating
Anyone got a good pointer to some aluminum heat treating specs?
I'm looking for the sequence to do 6061-T6 The issue is a high strength -T6 roll bar and what the consequences of a 450 degree powder coat oven are. Powder coat is nice, stregth reduction is not. Cheers. |
#2
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Aluminum heat treating
Roy J wrote:
Anyone got a good pointer to some aluminum heat treating specs? I'm looking for the sequence to do 6061-T6 The issue is a high strength -T6 roll bar and what the consequences of a 450 degree powder coat oven are. Powder coat is nice, stregth reduction is not. Cheers. As you probably already know this stuff is going to anneal real fast at this temperature. The good thing is you can bake powder coat very fast if you preheat your oven and your wall thickness is relatively thin. 1/2 hour exposure at 450 degrees F is going to cost you a 20% reduction in tensile strength at room temperture. Mil handbook 5 has a curve but it's a freakin huge PDF file so I hope you've got broadband. http://assist.daps.dla.mil/eAccess/l...1/MILHBK5J.PD5 Check out pg 3-276 fig 3.6.2.2.1(d). |
#3
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Aluminum heat treating
I got the page with the good info. Thanks.
Looks like the powder coat heat floats right in the wrong range. A bit lower and it is a minor issue, a bit more and you can easily lose half the strength. But you really should have said that the "freaking huge .pdf file" is a "HUMONGOUS freaking huge .pdf file" 1733 pages with lots of tables! Still trying to save it to disk. Only had to reboot twice so far. Broadband I have, stability I'm not so sure about. Cheers. tomcas wrote: Roy J wrote: Anyone got a good pointer to some aluminum heat treating specs? I'm looking for the sequence to do 6061-T6 The issue is a high strength -T6 roll bar and what the consequences of a 450 degree powder coat oven are. Powder coat is nice, stregth reduction is not. Cheers. As you probably already know this stuff is going to anneal real fast at this temperature. The good thing is you can bake powder coat very fast if you preheat your oven and your wall thickness is relatively thin. 1/2 hour exposure at 450 degrees F is going to cost you a 20% reduction in tensile strength at room temperture. Mil handbook 5 has a curve but it's a freakin huge PDF file so I hope you've got broadband. http://assist.daps.dla.mil/eAccess/l...1/MILHBK5J.PD5 Check out pg 3-276 fig 3.6.2.2.1(d). |
#4
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Aluminum heat treating
Chuckle. I waited until Sunday morning when net trffic is slow,
downloaded the whole file. All 68mb!! Sheesh! Roy J wrote: I got the page with the good info. Thanks. Looks like the powder coat heat floats right in the wrong range. A bit lower and it is a minor issue, a bit more and you can easily lose half the strength. But you really should have said that the "freaking huge .pdf file" is a "HUMONGOUS freaking huge .pdf file" 1733 pages with lots of tables! Still trying to save it to disk. Only had to reboot twice so far. Broadband I have, stability I'm not so sure about. Cheers. tomcas wrote: Roy J wrote: Anyone got a good pointer to some aluminum heat treating specs? I'm looking for the sequence to do 6061-T6 The issue is a high strength -T6 roll bar and what the consequences of a 450 degree powder coat oven are. Powder coat is nice, stregth reduction is not. Cheers. As you probably already know this stuff is going to anneal real fast at this temperature. The good thing is you can bake powder coat very fast if you preheat your oven and your wall thickness is relatively thin. 1/2 hour exposure at 450 degrees F is going to cost you a 20% reduction in tensile strength at room temperture. Mil handbook 5 has a curve but it's a freakin huge PDF file so I hope you've got broadband. http://assist.daps.dla.mil/eAccess/l...1/MILHBK5J.PD5 Check out pg 3-276 fig 3.6.2.2.1(d). |
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