GlennA
Mechanical
- Aug 1, 2002
- 5
I am experimenting with reducing the diameter on the end of thin walled (.028") 4130N tubing (5/8" OD). I'm using a technique like is used in metal spinning, simply applying pressure against the outside of the tube while it turns slowly on the lathe.
The result is good (I can get the end down to 3/8"), but I'm concerned that I may be making the material brittle. In experimenting with the technique I've succeeded in fracturing the end by forming too aggressively, but that can be avoided. The tubing is being modified for chain stays on a bicycle frame, specifically for the welding point to the rear dropouts which is a high stress area.
Am I weakening the material? If so, is there anything I can do to fix it?
The result is good (I can get the end down to 3/8"), but I'm concerned that I may be making the material brittle. In experimenting with the technique I've succeeded in fracturing the end by forming too aggressively, but that can be avoided. The tubing is being modified for chain stays on a bicycle frame, specifically for the welding point to the rear dropouts which is a high stress area.
Am I weakening the material? If so, is there anything I can do to fix it?