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nirVaan June 17th, 2005 23:10

Cast iron
 
can any one tell me magnetic properties and electrical conductivity of cast iron and why it is not desirable to be used in machine components

thankz

Mitch June 19th, 2005 16:09

Check the handbook of chemistry and physics.

Billy Boy July 8th, 2005 17:03

Well, I can't give you the chemisty and physics handbook answer, but I can tell you what i know about these matterials.

Cast Iron is magnetic and is conductive. It's magnetic proterties vary widely based on specific metalurgy, and how the matterial has been worked. (heated, cooled, hammered, etc) I'm told you can make a pretty decent magnet with cast iron if you cool it from liquid at the right pace and keep it under a magnetic field. I think that the goal is to grow larger crystals, and keep them all oriented.

Cast Iron is used a lot in machine componants. It is cheap and can be cast! (duh). Most milling machines for example are predominatly cast iron by weight. The calipers that sqweeze the rotors on the brakes of you car are probebly cast iron. The engine block most certainly is... though a pretty high grade.

The down sides of cast iron are that it is heavy, has low tensile strength (ie very brittle), can be quite abrasive making it hard to machine well and is realitively soft.... oh, and it rusts... and it doesn't weld well at all.

But Cast Iron is a pretty broad term that covers many different alloys. You can also cast steel and get a much higher quality result.

B

opuntia July 9th, 2005 03:19

Nice explanation :wink:


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