View Full Version : pic: Gold VexPro sprocket
nathannfm
17-09-2014, 23:59
[cdm-description=photo]40837[/cdm-description]
Adrian Clark
18-09-2014, 00:15
This reminds me of 2013. We used a press fit dead axle wheel assembly. To make assembly easier I put the shaft in a freezer and the sprockets on a hot plate, the sprockets would either get slightly lighter or turn a quite off putting green color.
It's worth noting that for aluminum to turn the color your sprocket did it needs to be heated to almost 2000F. Annealing aluminum on the other hand is done below 1000F. Just something to be aware of.
-Adrian
Akash Rastogi
18-09-2014, 01:23
edited: nevermind, noticed grinding marks.
Michael Corsetto
18-09-2014, 01:53
This reminds me of 2013. We used a press fit dead axle wheel assembly. To make assembly easier I put the shaft in a freezer and the sprockets on a hot plate, the sprockets would either get slightly lighter or turn a quite off putting green color.
"Easier" is one way to put it. I seem to remember you quickly putting two sprockets, a wheel, and the shaft in alignment, pouring on some green loctite, and hanging off a 5 ton arbor press in order to press the assembly together. With about a 50% success rate... :p
Good times!
-Mike
DampRobot
18-09-2014, 02:35
It's worth noting that for aluminum to turn the color your sprocket did it needs to be heated to almost 2000F. Annealing aluminum on the other hand is done below 1000F. Just something to be aware of.
-Adrian
Is this because the chemical structure of the dye used in the ano changes at high temperatures, or because some kind of thin film interference varies due to head expansion between two layers?
...
It's worth noting that for aluminum to turn the color your sprocket did it needs to be heated to almost 2000F. Annealing aluminum on the other hand is done below 1000F. Just something to be aware of.
-Adrian
At 2000 F your aluminum has turned into a puddle & no longer looks like a sprocket. Maybe even so at 1000F depending on the alloy. Anyway 1000 will have killed any age hardening. :]
I'm curious how you got the sprocket to hold its shape as the weld cooled - or was it a non-issue?
nathannfm
18-09-2014, 11:14
I'm curious how you got the sprocket to hold its shape as the weld cooled - or was it a non-issue?
I was not personally around for the welding but I don't believe they did anything special, nor did we instruct them to, and there is no warpage.
Adrian Clark
18-09-2014, 13:34
At 2000 F your aluminum has turned into a puddle & no longer looks like a sprocket. Maybe even so at 1000F depending on the alloy. Anyway 1000 will have killed any age hardening. :]
Good catch, thanks! I got my metals mixed up, aluminum melts at ~1200F so disregard my previous comment.
-Adrian
JamesCH95
18-09-2014, 14:46
Let us know how it holds up now that you've removed most, if not all, of the heat treatment!
Was this a 6061 or 7075 sprocket?
nathannfm
18-09-2014, 16:05
Was this a 6061 or 7075 sprocket?
It is a #25 plate sprocket, VexPro specifies that they are originally 6061-T6 AL
Let us know how it holds up now that you've removed most, if not all, of the heat treatment!
I doubt we will see any wear as it is a prototype in an extremely low rpm application, but if something interesting happens I'll post it.
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