This is simple stuff, man... feel free to look it up in Machinery's Handbook, the CRC Handbook of Mechanical Engineering, or any other.xpensive wrote:A correction factor now? Try again!
Well, again.. I have one. And it is steel. Next time I dig it out I'll have to take a picture of a magnet hanging from it. Same geometry, same coating as well. Can't speak for all of them across racing, but this one is steel.humble sabot wrote:I'd be shocked, full-on shocked if it was 'regular' steel as you put it.
I didn't say i'd be shocked if it was steel, just that if it were 'regular' steel. That implies to me a quality of material that any F1 engineer would likely turn their noses up at. High end steel alloys are far and away a different class of material from your basic mild steel.Jersey Tom wrote:Well, again.. I have one. And it is steel. Next time I dig it out I'll have to take a picture of a magnet hanging from it. Same geometry, same coating as well. Can't speak for all of them across racing, but this one is steel.humble sabot wrote:I'd be shocked, full-on shocked if it was 'regular' steel as you put it.
Don't see why it's shocking. Steel is great stuff, even on pro racecars.
Yes, aluminum fasteners and threads work in certain applications, particularly if it's a one-time installation. NOT the best call if there is high-torque, repeated on-and-off assembly. Having worked designing and fabricating spaceflight hardware previously, I will say that even then aluminum threads were hardly ever used.. in favor of stainless fasteners and steel thread inserts.