sheafromme
Mechanical
- May 1, 2020
- 25
Hi all,
I inherited a sheet metal part design that has some tabs bent on it that allow tensioned stabilizing lines (basically guy wires, but for a dock) to loop through as a tie-off point. I've gathered that the previous designer was very weight-conscious so specced the part as .188" 6061-T6 with .5" radii on the bends. However, I know 6061-T6 is finicky to bend and I heard from our supplier that often the bending process can affect the hardness/strength of the material in the bend region which is exactly where the rope loops through... I have been proposing switching to .25" 5052-H32 but have gotten pushback about the weight increase so I'm wondering two things and wanted to run it by you all: 1. Does bending 6061-T6, even with a huge radius, reduce the strength significantly. 2. Does switching to 5052-H32 as I propose at least sound reasonable? Back of the envelope the lower yield is made up for by the greater material thickness and I believe it'd be cheaper anyways, as well as avoiding any potential fab issues. I'm a mech-e but not usually involved in structural; just often called in to review other parts of the work at my company...
Thanks!
-Shea
I inherited a sheet metal part design that has some tabs bent on it that allow tensioned stabilizing lines (basically guy wires, but for a dock) to loop through as a tie-off point. I've gathered that the previous designer was very weight-conscious so specced the part as .188" 6061-T6 with .5" radii on the bends. However, I know 6061-T6 is finicky to bend and I heard from our supplier that often the bending process can affect the hardness/strength of the material in the bend region which is exactly where the rope loops through... I have been proposing switching to .25" 5052-H32 but have gotten pushback about the weight increase so I'm wondering two things and wanted to run it by you all: 1. Does bending 6061-T6, even with a huge radius, reduce the strength significantly. 2. Does switching to 5052-H32 as I propose at least sound reasonable? Back of the envelope the lower yield is made up for by the greater material thickness and I believe it'd be cheaper anyways, as well as avoiding any potential fab issues. I'm a mech-e but not usually involved in structural; just often called in to review other parts of the work at my company...
Thanks!
-Shea