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-   -   Which kind of Aluminum is a good choice (http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/showthread.php?t=138693)

Bob Z 23-10-2015 09:44

Which kind of Aluminum is a good choice
 
Hi everyone,
I the mechanical lead of team 5308. We are currently working on the new version of 2015 robot, and we are not sure what kind of aluminum is good for FRC robots. For bent parts, will 5052 the best choice? I will appreciate your help.
Thanks

jwfoss 23-10-2015 09:46

Re: Which kind of Aluminum is a good choice
 
Material selection is an engineering trade off but a general rule of thumb we go by is the following:
Sheetmetal/Bending (Up to .125 Thick) - 5052
Plates/Gearboxes (.125+ Thick) - 6061
Shafts (Hex or Round) - 7075

Rosiebotboss 23-10-2015 10:22

Re: Which kind of Aluminum is a good choice
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by jwfoss (Post 1501432)
Material selection is an engineering trade off but a general rule of thumb we go by is the following:
Sheetmetal/Bending (Up to .125 Thick) - 5052
Plates/Gearboxes (.125+ Thick) - 6061
Shafts (Hex or Round) - 7075

Be very careful of the origin of 7075 if you are using it in a high stress application. We used 7075 for drivetrain axles a few years ago only to replace them with 4041 (steel) after the 7075 fractured at the first competition. One of Rosie's mentors is a metallurgist and has a co worker who is an industry expert in aluminum and traced back this particular batch to China and really crappy grain structure after micro-sectioning and analysis.

nuclearnerd 23-10-2015 10:47

Re: Which kind of Aluminum is a good choice
 
Yeah, I'm still *really* surprised at the things FRC people use 7075 for. It's aluminum trying to be steel - same strength as (mild) steel, but way less stiffness, way less toughness and way less hardness. (The latter can sorta be overcome with hard anodizing, as long as you don't actually stress the coating too much.)

7075 could maybe find use in highly stressed structural plates, where you want to save weight on a big piece. But for small shafts & gears, don't be silly - just use steel!

D_Price 23-10-2015 11:06

Re: Which kind of Aluminum is a good choice
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by nuclearnerd (Post 1501444)
Yeah, I'm still *really* surprised at the things FRC people use 7075 for. It's aluminum trying to be steel - same strength as (mild) steel, but way less stiffness, way less toughness and way less hardness. (The latter can sorta be overcome with hard anodizing, as long as you don't actually stress the coating too much.)

7075 could maybe find use in highly stressed structural plates, where you want to save weight on a big piece. But for small shafts & gears, don't be silly - just use steel!

I agree. Just splurge a little more on steel as it will save you a ton of headaches :)

nuclearnerd 23-10-2015 11:37

Re: Which kind of Aluminum is a good choice
 
Also note welding aluminum is more difficult than steel, and 7075 can't be welded at all. Welding will reduce the strength of aluminum in the heat affected zone significantly. 6065 can be heat treated after welding to restore its strength, but you'd have to find an oven big enough to fit your whole weldment. It's easier to just design the part with a large safety margin, but doing so will eat into the weight advantage of aluminum.
http://www.lincolnelectric.com/en-ca...qs-detail.aspx

nuclearnerd 23-10-2015 11:44

Re: Which kind of Aluminum is a good choice
 
One more thought: While 6061-T6 is the arguable the best all-round alloy to use because of its strength (276 MPa at yield), 6063-T5 is far more common and cheaper at shops like metalsupermarkets.com. Be aware that 6063-T5 is only half the strength (145 MPa) of 6061-T6.

Madison 23-10-2015 11:52

Re: Which kind of Aluminum is a good choice
 
It might be worth noting that the question is, itself, coming from China.

Chris Endres 23-10-2015 13:20

Re: Which kind of Aluminum is a good choice
 
Just another note:

6061 is used best for flat parts.

5052 is great to bend.

It also depends on the bend radius, but for a rule of thumb, bent = 5052, straight = 6061.

For alloys, just make sure you do your research, we use 6061-T6 and 5052-H32.

Here's a video showing what happens when you make bents parts out of 6061 vs 5052.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KgeP__CSiSw

Richard Wallace 23-10-2015 13:46

Re: Which kind of Aluminum is a good choice
 
FWIW, my team has had no problems with shafts made from Thunderhex. We love the stuff because it fits both hex bearings and hex broached holes perfectly, eliminating the "file to fit" step. It also comes with a 0.2 inch center hole that works well for clearance to #10 screws and for tapping 1/4-20 threads. And it machines very easily, leaving beautiful diameter and face cuts with ordinary HSS tools.

It is 7075. I think Paul Copioli or one of his technical staff could provide some background on how they selected a supplier, and what tests were performed. I only know we have never bent or broken it.

IndySam 23-10-2015 14:08

Re: Which kind of Aluminum is a good choice
 
We use 3003 for our bent parts and 6061 for flat parts that need the extra strength. We only use 7075 when purchased in shaft form from AM or Vex.

We get most of our aluminum provided by our amazing sponsor Waterjet Cutting of Indiana.

R.C. 23-10-2015 15:00

Re: Which kind of Aluminum is a good choice
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by nuclearnerd (Post 1501444)
Yeah, I'm still *really* surprised at the things FRC people use 7075 for. It's aluminum trying to be steel - same strength as (mild) steel, but way less stiffness, way less toughness and way less hardness. (The latter can sorta be overcome with hard anodizing, as long as you don't actually stress the coating too much.)

7075 could maybe find use in highly stressed structural plates, where you want to save weight on a big piece. But for small shafts & gears, don't be silly - just use steel!

Isn't that almost the goal of 7075 for most teams? We want something kinda like steel but at 1/3 the weight? Since its engineering there is going to be a tradeoff...

It just doens't make sense to use steel on most of the robots, teams would almost NEVER make weight.

Common examples and weight differences:

3 Foot piece of Hex: AL .79 lbs steel would be closer to 2.37 lbs!
84T @ 1/2" Hex: AL: .53 lbs steel would be closer to 1.5 lbs!

In FRC using steel over aluminum in a many applications just doesn't make sense, especially not to our team and a whole lot of others. Also the run time is so short on the FRC robots that we really don't see failure.

Cory 23-10-2015 15:34

Re: Which kind of Aluminum is a good choice
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by nuclearnerd (Post 1501444)
Yeah, I'm still *really* surprised at the things FRC people use 7075 for. It's aluminum trying to be steel - same strength as (mild) steel, but way less stiffness, way less toughness and way less hardness. (The latter can sorta be overcome with hard anodizing, as long as you don't actually stress the coating too much.)

7075 could maybe find use in highly stressed structural plates, where you want to save weight on a big piece. But for small shafts & gears, don't be silly - just use steel!

This is terrible advice and I hope people don't blindly take it. You cannot possibly make a blanket statement like that without way more justification. The one use case that you feel 7075 is justified in is the one case I can't possibly imagine using it in, on a FRC robot.

7075 is perfectly good enough for almost any shafting or gear use in FRC, provided something stupid like putting snap ring grooves in the loaded portion of the shaft, or otherwise adding stress risers isn't done. These robots don't see the kind of duty cycle required to make steel a justifiable usage in all but the most highly loaded, atypical scenarios.

Frankly, the steel gears that are available for FRC use in COTS form (ie: hex broached, 8mm bore 2mm keyway, dog gears, etc) are all inferior in quality to VEXPro aluminum gears.

254 has been using 7075 shafting possibly longer than anyone in FIRST (11+ years now) and not once have we ever sheared a shaft, that I can recall.

So yes...if you want to be absolutely sure that you can mask most possible bad design decisions with material choice, feel free to use steel...just don't wonder why your robot doesn't make weight.

nuclearnerd 23-10-2015 16:35

Re: Which kind of Aluminum is a good choice
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Cory (Post 1501483)
This is terrible advice and I hope people don't blindly take it. You cannot possibly make a blanket statement like that without way more justification.

You're free to disagree, but I provided context and a justification.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Cory (Post 1501483)
So yes...if you want to be absolutely sure that you can mask most possible bad design decisions with material choice, feel free to use steel...

There's a fine justification right there. This is a student competition after all. Even the pros get it wrong sometimes (I won't single out a supplier here), so it's nice to have some margin.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Cory (Post 1501483)
just don't wonder why your robot doesn't make weight.

The difference honestly isn't worth it for small parts. You'd be looking at a difference less than 1/2 a pound between steel and aluminum for the size of parts I'm talking about, and less if you design the steel piece to take advantage of the improved properties.

If you can buy a COTS part in hard-anodized 7075-t6 and it comes with a good reputation, by all means - enjoy the tiny weight savings (and reduced wear life). But if you are designing a small, highly stressed component in house, I suggest you save yourself the hassle.

R.C. 23-10-2015 17:32

Re: Which kind of Aluminum is a good choice
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by nuclearnerd (Post 1501488)
If you can buy a COTS part in hard-anodized 7075-t6 and it comes with a good reputation, by all means - enjoy the tiny weight savings (and reduced wear life). But if you are designing a small, highly stressed component in house, I suggest you save yourself the hassle.

LOL you're making the 7075 part sound inferior.... I can't believe you're seeing enough wear in 7075 parts to justify steel and your robots must be massively under weight to ignore weight savings.


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