Stephan Nelle
Mechanical
- Jun 26, 2019
- 30
Having a debate with another group internally. Here's the scenario: 6061-T6 plate welded to a 5052-O tube. The plate gets NAS680A3 nutplates riveted on with (alodined) AD rivets. Group 1 is pushing to weld the plate to the tube, then rivet the nutplates to the plate, then alodine the whole assembly (MIL-DTL-5541, Type 1, Class 1A), and Group 2 (my group) is pushing to weld the plate to the tube, then alodine the weldment, then rivet the nutplates to the plate. Group 1 acknowledges it isn't standard practice to alodine after nutplates are installed, but they are insisting it won't cause any issues. My argument is that the deoxidizer dip step will allow the deoxidizer liquid (essentially acid) to get between the faying surfaces (between nutplates and plate, between rivets and nutplates, and between rivets and plate). There is of course a rinse after the deoxidizer, but my concern is that not 100% of the deoxidizer will be removed in the rinse step and this will cause corrosion in the future, starting between the faying surfaces.
My position is a hard 'no'; we should not alodine after the nutplates are riveted on, but rather before they are riveted on. Do any of you have experience that shows alodining after riveting on the nutplates doesn't cause corrosion issues later on?
My position is a hard 'no'; we should not alodine after the nutplates are riveted on, but rather before they are riveted on. Do any of you have experience that shows alodining after riveting on the nutplates doesn't cause corrosion issues later on?