aidrock
Marine/Ocean
- Oct 24, 2003
- 10
Please bear with my explanation below as I am a Civil Engineer working in a custom equipment building shop currently and am still working through all of the proper terminology.
I am working on a project that specified 1.00 x 4.00 x 9.0 Type 304L/ASTM A-240 for a certain part that is final machined to a size of 1.00(STK) x 4.00 x 8.50. There are a few holes that are added thru the 1" thickness - I believe the part is used as a tie-down for a transmission for a helicopter during transport, not during actual usage.
We bought the above size, but in A276/A479 as that is the specification for bar (4" width) vs plate that we would have had to burn/cut here. Our client, whom is the one actually contracted with the helicopter mfg, is rejecting this material and citing the incorrect ASTM designation. The material we bought came with certifications - all Mechanical requirements exceed A240/276/479 and Chemical comp's fall within guidelines.
It is my argument that the only difference between these three ASTM specifications is the designation of the material as Plate, Bar, Shapes, etc and does not have any bearing on the characteristics of the material itself.
Any thoughts or comments on this (sources comparing the two/three would be extremely helpful) would be greatly appreciated.
Kind regards,
Aidan
I am working on a project that specified 1.00 x 4.00 x 9.0 Type 304L/ASTM A-240 for a certain part that is final machined to a size of 1.00(STK) x 4.00 x 8.50. There are a few holes that are added thru the 1" thickness - I believe the part is used as a tie-down for a transmission for a helicopter during transport, not during actual usage.
We bought the above size, but in A276/A479 as that is the specification for bar (4" width) vs plate that we would have had to burn/cut here. Our client, whom is the one actually contracted with the helicopter mfg, is rejecting this material and citing the incorrect ASTM designation. The material we bought came with certifications - all Mechanical requirements exceed A240/276/479 and Chemical comp's fall within guidelines.
It is my argument that the only difference between these three ASTM specifications is the designation of the material as Plate, Bar, Shapes, etc and does not have any bearing on the characteristics of the material itself.
Any thoughts or comments on this (sources comparing the two/three would be extremely helpful) would be greatly appreciated.
Kind regards,
Aidan