WKTaylor
Active member
- Sep 24, 2001
- 4,003
All... HELP!!!
Generally speaking aluminum alloy 7079-T6xxx, any form [plate/sheet, forging, extrusion/bar, etc], is ruthlessly efficient in destroying itself in the real-world, long before 'natural initiation of fatigue cracking', IE: SCC and/or EXCO will initiate damage/failures long before fatigue cracking becomes a problem... so that the typical crack initiation/slow-growth/fast-rowth/catastrophic failure will rarely ever have a chance to happen.
However, a fair question was raised recently: where do DADTA experts 'go' for authoritative data on 7079-T6 fatigue damage values, IE: dA/dN, KIc, KIscc, etc.This is driving me crazy: The alloy was removed from service years ago, and not too much DADTA testing or service experience was developed to garner statistically significant data... or so it seems! I presume that most of the remaining parts in-service, actually surviving are in dry or fuel-wet areas only.
I have been asked to track down this data for out DADTA weenies on a sister acft system. To a limited degree I have bits-n-pieces of data... but nothing strung together and authoritative. I'm asking All Eng-Tips members if anyone has a ‘clue-card’ where this data might exist in-one-place. I am aware of some info in MIL-HDBK-5 [early versions]; and other MIL-HDBKs to a lesser degree…. But that’s it. Had hoped that the ASMH might have some data… but apparently NOT. Even my ASM reference... Fatigue Data Book: Light Structural Alloys only has (1/2) page. I have been querying 7079-T6 and found a few other obscure references. Within my company, 7079 appears to have been treated with similar low interest, probably because it was forcibly removed from most commercial/military acft/service decades ago.
Regards, Wil Taylor
o Trust - But Verify!
o We believe to be true what we prefer to be true.
o For those who believe, no proof is required; for those who cannot believe, no proof is possible.
o Unfortunately, in science what You 'believe' is irrelevant. ["Orion"]
o Learn the rules like a pro, so you can break them like an artist. [Picasso]
Generally speaking aluminum alloy 7079-T6xxx, any form [plate/sheet, forging, extrusion/bar, etc], is ruthlessly efficient in destroying itself in the real-world, long before 'natural initiation of fatigue cracking', IE: SCC and/or EXCO will initiate damage/failures long before fatigue cracking becomes a problem... so that the typical crack initiation/slow-growth/fast-rowth/catastrophic failure will rarely ever have a chance to happen.
However, a fair question was raised recently: where do DADTA experts 'go' for authoritative data on 7079-T6 fatigue damage values, IE: dA/dN, KIc, KIscc, etc.This is driving me crazy: The alloy was removed from service years ago, and not too much DADTA testing or service experience was developed to garner statistically significant data... or so it seems! I presume that most of the remaining parts in-service, actually surviving are in dry or fuel-wet areas only.
I have been asked to track down this data for out DADTA weenies on a sister acft system. To a limited degree I have bits-n-pieces of data... but nothing strung together and authoritative. I'm asking All Eng-Tips members if anyone has a ‘clue-card’ where this data might exist in-one-place. I am aware of some info in MIL-HDBK-5 [early versions]; and other MIL-HDBKs to a lesser degree…. But that’s it. Had hoped that the ASMH might have some data… but apparently NOT. Even my ASM reference... Fatigue Data Book: Light Structural Alloys only has (1/2) page. I have been querying 7079-T6 and found a few other obscure references. Within my company, 7079 appears to have been treated with similar low interest, probably because it was forcibly removed from most commercial/military acft/service decades ago.
Regards, Wil Taylor
o Trust - But Verify!
o We believe to be true what we prefer to be true.
o For those who believe, no proof is required; for those who cannot believe, no proof is possible.
o Unfortunately, in science what You 'believe' is irrelevant. ["Orion"]
o Learn the rules like a pro, so you can break them like an artist. [Picasso]