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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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#1
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I acquired a piece of precission machined cast aluminum tooling plate
and wonder if others have used this type of material and for what. The piece I have is 5/8 inch thick and about a foot square. Looks like it would be good for vise jaws, but think there might be some better use for it. Dan |
#2
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![]() wrote in message ... I acquired a piece of precission machined cast aluminum tooling plate and wonder if others have used this type of material and for what. The piece I have is 5/8 inch thick and about a foot square. Looks like it would be good for vise jaws, but think there might be some better use for it. Dan My opinion? Not great for vise jaws. Being cast, it's quite soft and doesn't machine all that well. It's not really much of a prize if you don't have need for aluminum tooling plate. It's normally used as the name implies---for tooling. Base plates for large fixtures, for example. Harold |
#3
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On Nov 29, 4:54*am, "Harold & Susan Vordos" wrote:
My opinion? *Not great for vise jaws. *Being cast, it's quite soft and doesn't machine all that well. * It's not really much of a prize if you don't have need for aluminum tooling plate. * It's normally used as the name implies---for tooling. * Base plates for large fixtures, for example. Harold I was thinking soft vise jaws. Looking on the internet, I found the hardness for MIC 6 to be 65 Brinell, which is softer than say 6061 t6. Dan |
#4
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On Mon, 28 Nov 2011 19:21:40 -0800 (PST), "
wrote: I acquired a piece of precission machined cast aluminum tooling plate and wonder if others have used this type of material and for what. The piece I have is 5/8 inch thick and about a foot square. Looks like it would be good for vise jaws, but think there might be some better use for it. Dan Greetings Dan, Cast tooling plate is good for stability. So it won't move like a similar wrought plate made from 6061. Threads pull out easier than 6061 so inserts are comminly used. The "precision machined" surface actually isn't unless someone machined it after buying the plate. The surface looks machined because the aluminum is cast against a machined surface. I used to wonder how the factory got that shiny machined surface when I never could quite match it myself. I figured they maybe used diamond cutters running dry at very high speeds to save time. Then I found out the stuff isn't machined afterall. Eric |
#5
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On Nov 29, 10:04*am, wrote:
Greetings Dan, Cast tooling plate is good for stability. So it won't move like a similar wrought plate made from 6061. Threads pull out easier than 6061 so inserts are comminly used. The "precision machined" surface actually isn't unless someone machined it after buying the plate. The surface looks machined because the aluminum is cast against a machined surface. I used to wonder how the factory got that shiny machined surface when I never could quite match it myself. I figured they maybe used diamond cutters running dry at very high speeds to save time. Then I found out the stuff isn't machined afterall. Eric I did some looking around on the internet. And found this at http://www.tquigley.com/mic-6.htm which says they do take off a few thousandth. The piece I have still has the protective film on it and looks as if it was machined with some kind of big rotating cutter. Dan Ultimately, it was a process pioneered by Hunter Engineering that led to today’s most advanced cast aluminum plate. The company, a forerunner of Alumax, developed a horizontal, continuous caster to produce individual plate thicknesses. Alumax refined the technology to bring dimensional control and stability to the next level. The original product (named CC-70) has evolved to become the state-of-the-art material known as Mic-6® Precision Machined Cast Aluminum Plate. Alcoa, which acquired Alumax in 1998, now produces and markets Mic-6® Precision Machined Cast Aluminum Plate at its Mill Products facility in Lancaster, Pennsylvania. The Mic-6® manufacturing technology involves a patented continuous casting technique that allows precise casting to near net thickness - the “as-cast” thickness is only a few thousands of an inch greater than the final plate thickness. Using a continuous flow of molten aluminum, casting speed and the rate of solidification are tightly controlled. A spinning nozzle inert filtration (SNIF) unit provides additional filtration and degassing, virtually eliminating internal defects. Proprietary equipment removes heat from both plate surfaces at a carefully balanced rate so thermal gradients are stabilized. As a result, grain size and distribution are identical on both plate surfaces! This unique casting process gives Mic-6® a granular structure that resembles a honeycomb (see Figure 1). In the solidification process, aluminum (which has a higher melting point than the alloying ingredients) forms the cell core with alloy elements concentrated between the cells. This segregation of low and high melting point compositions imparts characteristics that make Mic-6® highly machineable, producing small, uniform chips in a variety of high speed operations. After casting, the Mic-6® plate is subjected to thermal treatment in excess of 700 degrees F for up to 10 hours. The resulting product is fully stress relieved (fully annealed), eliminating stresses that developed during casting as well as any heat-treating effects that may have occurred during or after solidification. The material is “dead soft”, comparable to the “O” temper designation in wrought aluminum. These steps result in a significant design benefit for Mic-6®…there is no decrease in mechanical properties when the plate is exposed to elevated temperatures. This is true for both extended periods of high temperature and cyclical exposure (even an infinite number of thermal cycles). Once the Mic-6® plate is returned to room temperature, its tensile properties are the same as they were prior to exposure. There is no over-aging, which occurs in solution heat-treated plate, or the partial annealing that is characteristic of strain-hardened material. Accordingly, Mic-6® is recommended for applications where high temperature conditions would be a problem for wrought aluminum tempers. |
#7
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#8
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![]() "Jim Stewart" wrote in message ... ... I'm building a prototype 4-stroke gas engine and I used 1/2" MIC6 for the baseplate, sides and cylinder mount. Good stuff, flat enough that I don't have to fly cut it and I was able to find a vender that would cut up a sheet to the rough sizes I need and gave me the drops. MIC6 is also industry standard for electronics and mechanical assembly and test fixtures. I have a bench top made from a salvaged 1/2" piece that snapped when a kid tried using it as an ATV snowplow blade. It shattered like glass (or cast iron) and the broken edge shows no deformation. jsw |
#9
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On Nov 28, 10:21*pm, " wrote:
Looks like it would be good for vise jaws, but think there might be some better use for it. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *Dan I found another smaller piece in my assorted materials inventory and started to make some soft vise jaws. It does not saw well if you are using an old blade without much set in the teeth. But it does machine nicely. Dan |
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