David Kahn Posted June 21, 2011 Share Posted June 21, 2011 Thought this was kind of interestng, and that others might enjoy: http://www.asminternational.org/portal/site/www/NewsItem/?vgnextoid=2339b1d2fe480310VgnVCM100000621e010aRCRD Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ironsmith Posted June 21, 2011 Share Posted June 21, 2011 thanks posting Kinda wondering what they are gonna use it for... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bentiron1946 Posted June 22, 2011 Share Posted June 22, 2011 Jousting Armour, big call for that these day you know. :P Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ThomasPowers Posted June 22, 2011 Share Posted June 22, 2011 Well I know about 1/2 dozen folks making a living making jousting armour and dozens making foot jousting armour. Wall Street Journal once did an article about that proverbial bad economic choices in industry of buggy whip makers. Turned out the factory they interviewed was working massive over time trying to keep up with the harness racing demand and was doing quite well! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
thingmaker3 Posted June 23, 2011 Share Posted June 23, 2011 Article sez: "This flash-processed steel has ultimate tensile strength of 1694 MPa, which is at least 7% higher than published results on martensitic advanced high strength steel." I'm calling BS here. (Or maybe there's a typo in the article.) UT of 1694 MPa is just not very strong! There are many many steels which are stronger. This is really disappointing. I would think the ASM would fact-check (or edit, whichever is appropriate) more carefully. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MattBower Posted June 23, 2011 Share Posted June 23, 2011 Here's what seems to be the actual paper by the Ohio State folks. "Martensitic advanced high strength steel" appears to be a term of art in industry. It looks like they're talking about a category of steels that is very strong compared to other relatively low carbon steels with few expensive alloying elements. By that standard this seems to be a very impressive result. We're talking 8620 that's stronger than 1095 quenched and tempered at 400F, just for example, and only about 100 MPa weaker than 5160 given the same treatment. (I'm relying on eFunda for tensile strength info.) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
thingmaker3 Posted June 23, 2011 Share Posted June 23, 2011 Did some digging with Google. Gary Cola runs a CNC plate cutting business in Michigan. He's getting a great deal of press in the online tech news-sites. The media are making ridiculous claims. (What do you expect? They're the media, after all.) Gary Cola's personal claims are here: http://chapters.sme.org/069/technov07.pdf Feels a lot more like a sales-pitch than a break-through, but I'll reserve judgement until we here more from Dr. Suresh Babu and his team. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
thingmaker3 Posted June 23, 2011 Share Posted June 23, 2011 Thank you, Matt! That paper makes a LOT more sense than the hype I was trying to dig through! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.