Titanium firing pins
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Re: Titanium firing pins
I currently use EN24 in the T state
- Pippin89
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Re: Titanium firing pins
That will do it... Do you buy it in T state and machine it carefully with lots of coolant or do you heat treat it yourself?Ovenpaa wrote:I currently use EN24 in the T state
If you want to over-do it then something like D2 will work I would have thought. EN24 is much nicer to machine though!
P.S as a MechE I am very much liking this new forum section.
Re: Titanium firing pins
Both, I have a little PID electric HT oven I built a while ago.
I have a lump of 50mm dia D2 on the rack next to me for a project, it is always fun to machine and gives a nice finish as well. Probably an overkill for firing pins and strikers :)
I have a lump of 50mm dia D2 on the rack next to me for a project, it is always fun to machine and gives a nice finish as well. Probably an overkill for firing pins and strikers :)
- Pippin89
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Re: Titanium firing pins
Like I said... if you wanted to over do it....Ovenpaa wrote:Both, I have a little PID electric HT oven I built a while ago.
I have a lump of 50mm dia D2 on the rack next to me for a project, it is always fun to machine and gives a nice finish as well. Probably an overkill for firing pins and strikers :)
Electric HT oven is something I want to do at some point. I make knives as a sideline hobby. But I use a propane forge at the moment for heat treatment. Having an electric one would be so much easier.
Re: Titanium firing pins
This is/was the start of mine, I need to update the Journal to show where it is now.
https://shootingshed.co.uk/wp/2018/11/h ... ld-starts/
https://shootingshed.co.uk/wp/2018/11/h ... ld-starts/
- Pippin89
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Re: Titanium firing pins
Very nice! Good temperatures too! Couldn't quite forge weld but for anything else its bang on.
Re: Titanium firing pins
Yes, in the real world 1000C ish is ample for most things and I have no plans to become a blacksmith.e specially as there is a forge being built maybe 100 yards away or less.
Re: Titanium firing pins
Demo, for those whove never seen it burn:waterford103 wrote:The swarf is highly flammable and cannot easily be extinguished.
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Re: Titanium firing pins
Note that titanium is not alone in geing a flammable metal.
Set fire to a clump of steel wool and see if you can put it out! Better still, if you have access to a really hot flame, try it with aluminium---and you definitely will not be able to put this out.
A powdered mixture of iron and aluminium swarf was used to surround the ends of railway lines and, when ignited, would weld them together.
Fred
Set fire to a clump of steel wool and see if you can put it out! Better still, if you have access to a really hot flame, try it with aluminium---and you definitely will not be able to put this out.
A powdered mixture of iron and aluminium swarf was used to surround the ends of railway lines and, when ignited, would weld them together.
Fred
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