CleviteKid
03-31-2004, 06:26
Reference: NO OIL IN ENGINE (http://forum.thedieselpage.com/ubb/ultimatebb.php?ubb=get_topic;f=2;t=002697) ! !
Doc,
I got a chuckle out of your response to my post about nitriding. It is tough not to get excited since everything we talk about in my classes (fluid power, thermo, mat. science, statics and dynamics, etc.) somehow has an application "under the hood."
Question: What is the carbon content on the crank, and what other alloying elements are present? I understand if you haven't rushed down to the lab, crankshaft in hand, and tested the part's makeup. Generally speaking though, what kind of composition can we "get away with" without sacrificing strength, wear resistance, and low cost?
I'm becoming more interested in metallurgy as I progress through my degree (welding science is next), and so I have come away from each of my materials class sessions with more than a few questions. Therefore my post on TDP sounds perfectly reasonable to me (a gearhead), but even my girlfriend read it saying, "David, isn't this going a bit far?"
"Of course it is," I replied.
Thanks,
David
* * * * * *
Hey David,
Glad I could make you chuckle.
Without looking it up, our cranks would be a high grade of nodular iron, meaning a carbon content of around 3%, magnesium and nickel under 1% each to give the carbon the nodular structure, not flakes as in ordinary gray cast iron, some manganese ( .5 --> 1.5%) that is in almost all iron and steel alloys, and some silicon (less than 1%, I think). Any thing else is just a tramp contaminant, and sulfur and phosphorus would be held to very low levels, since these embrittle iron and steel. The UTS is probably over 100,000 psi (do you use metric megaPascals, or old fashioned Christian units there?) and the ductility is probably around 5% elongation.
Metallurgy is an underappreciated discipline, but it sure is important to industry.
Dr. Lee :cool:
Doc,
I got a chuckle out of your response to my post about nitriding. It is tough not to get excited since everything we talk about in my classes (fluid power, thermo, mat. science, statics and dynamics, etc.) somehow has an application "under the hood."
Question: What is the carbon content on the crank, and what other alloying elements are present? I understand if you haven't rushed down to the lab, crankshaft in hand, and tested the part's makeup. Generally speaking though, what kind of composition can we "get away with" without sacrificing strength, wear resistance, and low cost?
I'm becoming more interested in metallurgy as I progress through my degree (welding science is next), and so I have come away from each of my materials class sessions with more than a few questions. Therefore my post on TDP sounds perfectly reasonable to me (a gearhead), but even my girlfriend read it saying, "David, isn't this going a bit far?"
"Of course it is," I replied.
Thanks,
David
* * * * * *
Hey David,
Glad I could make you chuckle.
Without looking it up, our cranks would be a high grade of nodular iron, meaning a carbon content of around 3%, magnesium and nickel under 1% each to give the carbon the nodular structure, not flakes as in ordinary gray cast iron, some manganese ( .5 --> 1.5%) that is in almost all iron and steel alloys, and some silicon (less than 1%, I think). Any thing else is just a tramp contaminant, and sulfur and phosphorus would be held to very low levels, since these embrittle iron and steel. The UTS is probably over 100,000 psi (do you use metric megaPascals, or old fashioned Christian units there?) and the ductility is probably around 5% elongation.
Metallurgy is an underappreciated discipline, but it sure is important to industry.
Dr. Lee :cool: