Re: Welding or brazing 3D printed stainless steel
Originally Posted by
EricKeller
I'd be really surprised if someone hasn't done Charpy testing on most of these materials. I have always wondered about fatigue.
yep,
and therein lies the key point for any material you want to build a bicycle frame with. Fatigue performance. The term was 'notch sensitivity' in my engineering study. Given that a bicycle frame is a fatigue-failure resisting structure (of a desired stiffness, achieved at the lowest possible weight) 'notch sensitivity' is the key feature of the material. Aluminium frames for example had to be made very stiff and inflexible (and then sold to us by the marketing departments) in order to achieve anything resembling the lifespan of a good alloyed-steel frame because the material itself couldn't be both supple and resist premature fatigue failure. A frame made of glass anyone?
Most of a bicycle frame is structural and has over time been pared back to the minimum so ideally it's all on the verge of failure but without anywhere for a failure to start (with good design that doesn't add dumb stress-risers). Also, much of what I've seen designed on computer lately is apparently ignorant of what and why things failed in the past. Garbage in, garbage out. But the cool factor seems to trump that for some.... for the short term at least.
3D printed prototypes for investment castings are fantastic!
Ewen Gellie
Melbourne Australia
full-time framebuilder, Mechanical Engineer, (Bach. of Eng., University of Melbourne)
[url]www.gelliecustombikeframes.com.au[/url]
[URL="http://instagram.com/gellie_custom_bikes"]http://instagram.com/gellie_custom_bikes[/URL]
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