Do you think 17-4 is suitable for marine use?I am making a part for autopilot on a sailboat. It attaches the steering ram to the steering quadrant. It will be inside the boat in a unheard area
Thanks for this! I am headed to a role where I need to have a bit of background on SS alloys and treatments to have a better understanding of what paths to follow in order to problem-solve. This fits that need, and gives me a place to start with the written literature I have for a fuller understanding!!
Thanks for your Vedio, it is informative to us, just we want to know the surface hardness and core hardness of round bars after age hardening of 17-4 material , and can we finish machining after age hardening , is it suitable or correct.?
Hardness will not vary significantly from surface to core in most cases. Heat treated conditions are all more difficult to machine but can be done. There is no single answer as to the best manufacturing plan. Some configurations are best machined after heat treatment while others more effective to heat treat after machining. Others would be most effective with rough machine... heat treat..... finish machine or finish grind.
@@MichlinMetals Anything... Some figures, images, diagrams, charts, or even some text on the screen. Watch other technical videos and you get the idea. At least give him a whiteboard or tell him to prepare a PowerPoint presentation. .. To be honest, after 30 seconds, I just hit the dislike bottom. And I am an engineer who even watches Indian engineering videos on youtube... Go figure...
@@KondoriRamin Thank you for the feedback. Usually engineers have a higher degree of knowledge and thus these videos might not be as informative to a person who has studied metallurgy. Even with more #s listed, it's hard to make the videos interesting. Sorry you do not like them and again, we appreciate the feedback.
@@MichlinMetals He is a colleague and he is promoting materials engineering which is something we should support. I want him to have a lot of views and subscribers...
@michlin metals Inc. I agree. I'm not an engineer, im a welder, but I'm really interested in metallurgy, and if there were some visual diagrams it would give me a better understanding on what you're talking about. Still Love the videos though
Do you think 17-4 is suitable for marine use?I am making a part for autopilot on a sailboat. It attaches the steering ram to the steering quadrant. It will be inside the boat in a unheard area
Thanks for this! I am headed to a role where I need to have a bit of background on SS alloys and treatments to have a better understanding of what paths to follow in order to problem-solve. This fits that need, and gives me a place to start with the written literature I have for a fuller understanding!!
Glad your find the content useful. Thank you so much for the positive feedback. Appreciate you watching!
Thanks for your Vedio, it is informative to us, just we want to know the surface hardness and core hardness of round bars after age hardening of 17-4 material , and can we finish machining after age hardening , is it suitable or correct.?
Hardness will not vary significantly from surface to core in most cases. Heat treated conditions are all more difficult to machine but can be done. There is no single answer as to the best manufacturing plan. Some configurations are best machined after heat treatment while others more effective to heat treat after machining. Others would be most effective with rough machine... heat treat..... finish machine or finish grind.
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Ahhh so it’s just on the edge of being unworkable? And a heat treatment can bring it to a very high hardness? Interesting
Without any visual aid, these videos will not get as many audiences as they should...
What type of visual aid would you find helpful?
@@MichlinMetals
Anything...
Some figures, images, diagrams, charts, or even some text on the screen. Watch other technical videos and you get the idea. At least give him a whiteboard or tell him to prepare a PowerPoint presentation. ..
To be honest, after 30 seconds, I just hit the dislike bottom. And I am an engineer who even watches Indian engineering videos on youtube...
Go figure...
@@KondoriRamin Thank you for the feedback. Usually engineers have a higher degree of knowledge and thus these videos might not be as informative to a person who has studied metallurgy. Even with more #s listed, it's hard to make the videos interesting. Sorry you do not like them and again, we appreciate the feedback.
@@MichlinMetals
He is a colleague and he is promoting materials engineering which is something we should support. I want him to have a lot of views and subscribers...
@michlin metals Inc. I agree. I'm not an engineer, im a welder, but I'm really interested in metallurgy, and if there were some visual diagrams it would give me a better understanding on what you're talking about. Still Love the videos though