ShadowsPapa
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Bill
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HAHAHAWith the current 3.6 Pentastar, nothing on this thing is high speed .. Plus aerodynamically its just not feasible anyways ...
Do I have to do all of the heavy lifting around here ?
My father worked in a factory - I learned before I was a teen about presses, the various types of steel, how it's formed, what HSS really is, tensile strength, and so on. Even toured the plant where he worked. Also toured multiple auto plants (Ford, Chrysler, etc.) and John Deere where I got to watch tractor frames formed and in another plant, engine blocks made.
Then in college got to learn more about automotive design and construction and repair. Took a short body shop class as well (back when you could buy all of the paint, primer, reducer and so on for under 100 bucks). In machine shop classes had to learn about the various types of steel, bolt TENSILE strength, how to torque bolts using stretch measurements, and more.
These are high strength frames, even high strength steel compared to most others, but it's not HSS as that's high speed steel, a different animal. It's more brittle once it reaches it's limits where other steels will bend.
LOL - I know! I read their bits years ago.Thats not marketing, HSS and AHSS are official desginations of steel. These arent the same steels you got even 10 years ago, this stuff is significantly stronger pound for pound than the old school steels.
And HSS is HIGH SPEED STEEL. That's not what this is.
HSS - high speed steel - CUTTING TOOLS, drill bits, NOT FRAMES.
HSS is expensive - and typically it's an alloy having molybdenum, tungsten and chromium steel about 63–65 Rockwell "C" hardness.
Now do I need to pull out my Machinery's Handbook with more detail?
There's high strength steel and advanced high strength steel - having to do with their yield strength.
Rather than pull out the books and scan and post copyrighted pages (those books are NOT cheap) - here's a bit about AHSS -
Advanced high-strength steels (AHSS) are a class of steel used primarily in sheet form for automotive structures.
AHSS has a tensile strength of at least 440 MPa
They have a low alloying and carbon content to retain formability (so they can be pressed and rolled and formed) and weldability.
In other words, not like HSS or High Speed Steel which is very different.
high strength and advanced high strength weld very differently from mild steel or other steels.
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