Originally Posted by
wai
"solution heat treated" (i.e. during cooling, they are quenched at a particular point to prevent certain alloying elements from precipitating out). If they are heated beyond a point for a prolonged period this can cause these elements to precipitate out effectively reversing any heat treatment.
Actually, the problem is the cooling process (the quench part). ALL aluminum alloys will precipitate out a major portion of their alloying elements but the issue is how these precipitates are dispersed. With rapid controlled cooling, the precipitates will be very small and evenly dispersed, providing mechanical resistance points between the aluminum grains which normally have very soft boundaries. With slow cooling, the alloying elements tend to migrate together as they precipitate out making them useless chunks of harder metal in the soft aluminum base.
Additionally, even if the aluminum alloy has been properly quenched, many alloys take a long time for the alloying elements to precipitate out so they need to be heated to back up a lower temperature to speed up the precipitation process. Otherwise the fine precipitate particles won't be present and you are back to a soft (but very slowly hardening) aluminum alloy (annealed is the proper term here).
Makes you wonder about 6061 aluminum rotor carriers....
Originally Posted by
gavs
No freezing in our powdercoat line....
Do you filter the air through an airconditioning system (ie freeze out the water remotely) before the powdercoating takes place?
Last edited by kaanage; 07-02-2012 at 12:48 PM.
Resident grumpy old fart
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