[AT] A long shot--Wisconsin part
Richard Fink Sr
nancydick at pennswoods.net
Sun Jul 2 04:47:50 PDT 2006
At 06:58 AM 7/1/2006 -0500, you wrote:
>Mig welding Cast Iron has worked for me also. If the cast iron has been
>heated or should I say heated treated then it will become ductile
>iron. You can weld ductile iron. A fresh casting is considered white
>cast if it has cooled rapidly in the mold. This is the reason that you
>can't hardly machine wheel weights, barbell weights, or the large old
>chain sprockets. These were not heated and allowed the iron to change
>states from white cast to ductile. Since it costs for heat treating,
>cheap castings are brittle as they have not been heat treated. Ductile
>iron is made by heating white cast iron for a long period of time until
>the grain structure redefines. Some of the new methods for block
>degreasing is to put the block in a high heat oven for a few hours to bake
>the grease and crap off them. I wonder if this changes the grain
>structure of the steel.
>
>Whew! It has been 35 years since I had steel composition and heat
>treating in college. Went thru a lot of cobwebs to get there too.!!!!!
>
>Cecil in OKla
The only place i learned any of that stuff was at the school of hard knocks.
and it was not explained in them terms. Worth knowing
R Fink
PA
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