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Mark.Summers(at)lwbref.co Guest
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Posted: Sun Feb 12, 2006 7:06 am Post subject: WELDING 4130 |
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----- Forwarded by Mark Summers/LWB/WRE/Lhoist on 02/12/2006 09:01 AM -----
<dave(at)cfisher.com
> To: <Mark.Summers(at)lwbref.com>
cc:
02/10/2006 06:40 Subject: WELDING 4130
PM
I received this from another reader that has been giving some experienced
advice just wanted to get another opinion and idea on the posting about
welding.
Mark ,
We spoke about welding.............
ANNEALING WILL SOFTEN YOUR METAL AND YOU ONLY WANT TO NORMALIZ to 800 to
900F .
I have been welding gas tig and mig for over 30 years ...........
Good luck,
Dave
Annealing increases ductility and removes stresses from formed or part
formed material, producing a large-grained structure, making the metal less
tough and easier to machine or cold-form. The process involves heating to a
suitable temperature, soaking at that temperature to create a stable
structure, then allowing the metal to cool very slowly.
The heat treatment condition is often identified by the letter 'A'
[annealed] or 'N' [normalised] after the alloy designation [4130 N] or a
code like '4130 QT900F' which indicates that the alloy has been quenched
and
then tempered at 900 F. Scratchbuilders use 4130 in the normalised
condition.
If it is necessary to recover full normalised strength in the joint areas
affected by welding members into an airframe, 4130 N tube structures have
to
be re-normalised. This is done by re-heating those heat affected zones,
with
an oxy-acetylene torch for example, to a temperature around 800/850 C and
then allowing the metal to cool slowly. The process must be carried out in
still air at normal temperature and some jigging may be required to prevent
distortion in the frame. Re-normalising will also relieve the heat
expansion/contraction stresses induced in the tubing near the weld. Pure
stress relieving, without re-normalising, occurs at temperatures around
650/700 C.
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iworonko(at)cox.net Guest
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Posted: Sun Feb 12, 2006 7:41 am Post subject: WELDING 4130 |
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Great info but how do you tell at what temperature the material is at when
you are heating it with a torch?
Eric
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donpearsall Guest
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Posted: Sun Feb 12, 2006 8:41 am Post subject: WELDING 4130 |
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Eric, I was just looking at a temperature chart from my book "How to weld
damn near anything", and the annealing temperature for steel is 1700f, with
a color of orange. Here are the rest of the colors:
1000f - Faint red - Nitriding
1100f - Blood Red - Stress Relieving
1300- 1500f - Cherry Red - Atomic Changes
1600f - Salmon - Normalizing
1700f - Orange - Annealing
2000f - Bright Yellow Magnetism lost
2100-2500f - White - Forging
2600-2900f - Steel Melts
Don Pearsall
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