matweb.com says for CTE of 390Rodak wrote: ↑31 Dec 2023, 03:37Well, I'm curious about the claim of the coefficient changing 'a lot' with temperature. Everything I see agrees that it's not linear and does increase with temperature although the changes are minor; we're dealing with pretty low temperatures in an internal combustion engine. Do you have a source for this? I'd appreciate a reference.Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑24 Dec 2023, 19:46well ....
billet LS blocks are made from 6061 alloy ....
unlike the usual cast block alloy (357) it has little silicon and so has greater coefficient of expansion
390 alloy (for pistons) has very high silicon content and so unusually low expansion - but isn't used for blocks
presumably GM knew what they were doing
these lowish coefficients of expansion increase a lot with temperature
10 ppm/degF 20 - 100 degC (68-212 degF)
12.5 ppm/degF 20 - 300 degC (68-572 degF)
these of course are mean expansions - so giving an impression of less CTE variation than would the raw data
iirc the change isn't even monotonic (FIA-speak) eg where I was involved eg nickel maraging steels c.ambient temps