[TheForge] tempering aluminum
Ries Niemi
rniemi at fidalgo.net
Tue Feb 14 12:11:27 EST 2006
On Feb 14, 2006, at 6:24 AM, Justin Fellenz wrote:
> Does anyone know about how to re-temper aluminum? I know very little
> about how aluminum works beyond how to anneal it to make it soft and
> to forge when hardwood leaves a skidmark. But I was thinking about
> whether it would be possible to build a motorcycle swingarm (I'm
> thinking a swoopy single-sided job) by hammerforming a three-sided
> shape hot and then welding in internal bracing and the fourht side to
> make a box. But then it would be annealed, and I suspect that it
> should be a good springy temper. T-6 seems to be the common one.
>
> Really airing out my ignorance here, but none of my books have
> anything on this.
>
> Thanks,
>
> JRF
This is probably not feasible in a home shop type environment.
Commercially, they use big, very temperature controlled ovens,
sometimes they water quench, but the recipes are tricky, and vary with
the slightest change in alloy. Some alloys will age harden, others only
work harden.
Overbuild, internal brace, and dont worry about it getting softer.
Ries Niemi
Industrial Artist
http://www.RiesNiemi.com
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