RGA1200
Mechanical
- Feb 7, 2008
- 2
Hi All,
I have a sand cast aluminium motorcycle crankcase (believed to be A356 T6) which had been 'ventilated' by an exploding component. I had the case welded and then found it had warped by 2-3mm and upset the alignment of bearing bores at the split line.
Through various channels including this site I decided on a process of precipitation heat treatment. I made steel mandrels which located on the bores for the three shafts, then baked it (in my kitchen oven!), initially to a heat of around 160C for 6 hours, unfortunately this achieved nothing. The second attempt was to a temp of 250C, gradulally bringing the temp up 25C per hour, holding for 24hrs, then reducing 25C per hour again. Temp monitoring was by 4 K-type thermocouples at various locations. My kitchen smelt pretty bad!
Happily the distortion come out perfectly and the case was dead flat again and the bearing bores were now all in line again. I point out that this case is very rare and no longer available. I seemed to have saved it.
I assembled the engine and ran for 500km. Upon removing the top end to adjust valve clearances, I found one loose head stud (out of 12), it had torqued up ok on assembly, but with a few heat cycles had stripped.
Is it possible that my heat treatment has softened the material? I understood that I had not gone high enough in temp to affect the temper. This engine had numerous stripped studs in other places, so this is possibly just a residual problem from earlier over-tensioning by previous owners. There is not much room for a time-sert, so you only have one shot at it. If the material is possibly weakened I need to address that before doing anything else.
Any thoughts would be most appreciated. Apologies for the long post.
Thanks in advance
Steve
I have a sand cast aluminium motorcycle crankcase (believed to be A356 T6) which had been 'ventilated' by an exploding component. I had the case welded and then found it had warped by 2-3mm and upset the alignment of bearing bores at the split line.
Through various channels including this site I decided on a process of precipitation heat treatment. I made steel mandrels which located on the bores for the three shafts, then baked it (in my kitchen oven!), initially to a heat of around 160C for 6 hours, unfortunately this achieved nothing. The second attempt was to a temp of 250C, gradulally bringing the temp up 25C per hour, holding for 24hrs, then reducing 25C per hour again. Temp monitoring was by 4 K-type thermocouples at various locations. My kitchen smelt pretty bad!
Happily the distortion come out perfectly and the case was dead flat again and the bearing bores were now all in line again. I point out that this case is very rare and no longer available. I seemed to have saved it.
I assembled the engine and ran for 500km. Upon removing the top end to adjust valve clearances, I found one loose head stud (out of 12), it had torqued up ok on assembly, but with a few heat cycles had stripped.
Is it possible that my heat treatment has softened the material? I understood that I had not gone high enough in temp to affect the temper. This engine had numerous stripped studs in other places, so this is possibly just a residual problem from earlier over-tensioning by previous owners. There is not much room for a time-sert, so you only have one shot at it. If the material is possibly weakened I need to address that before doing anything else.
Any thoughts would be most appreciated. Apologies for the long post.
Thanks in advance
Steve