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Here is a question I am asking for a friend. He bought these 2024-T0 wing
ribs and wants to have them heat treated. He is in near L.A., CA and couldn't find a shop that would do anything thinner than .04". Does any of you know how to heat treat formed ribs and possibly know a shop in the L.A. area? My friend is especially concerned about getting them straight again after they came out of the oven. Thanks a bunch! Holger |
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On Sun, 01 Feb 2004 12:02:02 -0800, Holger Stephan
wrote: Can't help you on heat treat shops in LA, but the one I go to here (in the Seattle area) has no problem doing material down to .025. Also, for no additional charge, they'll pack my parts in a box of dry ice to keep them in W condition (I think that's what it's called) so they won't harden up right away. That way you can bring them home and you get about 96 hours to straighten them before they fully harden up. Good luck in finding a heat treat shop down there that will work (there has to be scads of them in the LA area I would think.....). Bela P. Havasreti Here is a question I am asking for a friend. He bought these 2024-T0 wing ribs and wants to have them heat treated. He is in near L.A., CA and couldn't find a shop that would do anything thinner than .04". Does any of you know how to heat treat formed ribs and possibly know a shop in the L.A. area? My friend is especially concerned about getting them straight again after they came out of the oven. Thanks a bunch! Holger |
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Bela P. Havasreti wrote:
On Sun, 01 Feb 2004 12:02:02 -0800, Holger Stephan Can't help you on heat treat shops in LA, but the one I go to here (in the Seattle area) has no problem doing material down to .025. ... Bela P. Havasreti Thanks, Bela (are you Hungarian?)! That's pretty good information. Seattle may work too. I am in Portland and if he can't find anything down there he could send them to me. What is the name of that shop? - Holger |
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![]() "Holger Stephan" wrote in message ... Here is a question I am asking for a friend. He bought these 2024-T0 wing ribs and wants to have them heat treated. He is in near L.A., CA and couldn't find a shop that would do anything thinner than .04". Does any of you know how to heat treat formed ribs and possibly know a shop in the L.A. area? My friend is especially concerned about getting them straight again after they came out of the oven. Thanks a bunch! Holger There are several vendors located in the LA area that are Boeing qualified for aluminum heat treating, Astro, Alumax, Newton being some I recall and yes, you would want them shipped back in coindition "W"( in dry ice) so you can restrike them to straighten, then allow them to go to room temp and T4 condition. Note: you have to restrike them almost immediatly after removal from the 0 degrees temp. |
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On Sun, 01 Feb 2004 13:52:00 -0800, Holger Stephan
wrote: Bela P. Havasreti wrote: On Sun, 01 Feb 2004 12:02:02 -0800, Holger Stephan Can't help you on heat treat shops in LA, but the one I go to here (in the Seattle area) has no problem doing material down to .025. ... Bela P. Havasreti Thanks, Bela (are you Hungarian?)! That's pretty good information. Seattle may work too. I am in Portland and if he can't find anything down there he could send them to me. What is the name of that shop? - Holger Yes. Both Mom 'n Pop are '56-ers. The Seattle area heat treat place I go to is called AlMet. They are in Kent, and they are also a MilSpec qualified heat treat facility (the local Boeing plants offload many parts to Almet). All I have is a phone number for them: 253-852-1690. Bela P. Havasreti |
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Bela P. Havasreti wrote:
On Sun, 01 Feb 2004 13:52:00 -0800, Holger Stephan ... Yes. Both Mom 'n Pop are '56-ers. The Seattle area heat treat place I go to is called AlMet. They are in Kent, and they are also a MilSpec qualified heat treat facility (the local Boeing plants offload many parts to Almet). All I have is a phone number for them: 253-852-1690. Bela P. Havasreti Thanks to Bela and Franklin! Nice how RAH works. Beautiful country your parents come from, Bela. My father was born and partly grew up in Pecs. There are still some churches with frescos by my grandfather; I hope to see them one day. - Holger |
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Stack Metallurgical Services, located on Swan Island.
Holger Stephan wrote: Bela P. Havasreti wrote: On Sun, 01 Feb 2004 12:02:02 -0800, Holger Stephan Can't help you on heat treat shops in LA, but the one I go to here (in the Seattle area) has no problem doing material down to .025. ... Bela P. Havasreti Thanks, Bela (are you Hungarian?)! That's pretty good information. Seattle may work too. I am in Portland and if he can't find anything down there he could send them to me. What is the name of that shop? - Holger -- John Kimmel I think it will be quiet around here now. So long. |
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I'm Holgers'friend with the ribs. I actually live south of L.A. in
Orange County,CA. The company I called, Bodycote, says they can straighten the ribs after treating if I can provide a form. I would really prefer to have it done by them. Is that advisable? I can't picture myself working under the gun to straighten 24 ribs when I've never done it before, and there's a limited time before the ribs harden. Craig |
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All Thumbs wrote:
I'm Holgers'friend with the ribs. I actually live south of L.A. in Orange County,CA. The company I called, Bodycote, says they can straighten the ribs after treating if I can provide a form. I would really prefer to have it done by them. Is that advisable? I can't picture myself working under the gun to straighten 24 ribs when I've never done it before, and there's a limited time before the ribs harden. Craig I must have missed the memo... What airplane are you building that calls for heat treated ribs???? Richard |
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Richard Lamb wrote in message I must have missed the memo...
What airplane are you building that calls for heat treated ribs???? Richard I am re-building a BD-4 with metal wings. I purchased the ribs from a vendor. They are .032 2024 T0 aluminum. The vendor told me up front that his attempts to heat treat these ribs had resulted in cracking, although we did not discuss what method he used. Since then I've been told that aside from being structurally unsound, "0" condition aluminum will be difficult to rivet due to it's softness. I'm hoping that some heat treater in So Cal will have the experience to treat these without destroying them. Craig |
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