Hostname: page-component-77c89778f8-gq7q9 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-18T01:12:47.305Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Problems Associated with the Production and Use of Wrought Aluminium Alloys

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 July 2016

G. Forrest
Affiliation:
Aluminium Laboratories Ltd., Banbury
K. Gunn
Affiliation:
Aluminium Laboratories Ltd., Banbury

Extract

The 988th Lecture to be given before the Society and the 25th Main Lecture to be held at a Branch of the Society, “ Problems Associated with the Production and Use of Wrought Aluminium Alloys,” by G. Forrest, B.SC, A.M.I.Mech.E., A.F.R.Ae.S., and K. Gunn, B.Sc, A.R.S.M., was held under the auspices of the Belfast Branch on 5th April 1956. Mr. D. Keith-Lucas, F.R.Ae.S., Chairman of the Belfast Branch, opened the proceedings, and Mr. E. T. Jones, C.B., O.B.E, M.Eng., F.R.Ae.S., presided for the rest of the meeting.

Mr. Keith-Lucas (Branch Chairman): This was a great occasion for the Belfast Branch because for the third time they were honoured to be the hosts of the parent Society, the Royal Aeronautical Society. It was with great pleasure that he welcomed their guests. First of all, Mr. E. T. Jones, the President-elect of the Royal Aeronautical Society, Dr. Ballantyne, the Secretary, and Mr. Dunsby and Mr. Simmons, both of the Technical Department, of the Society. The President, Mr. N. E. Rowe, and the Chairman of the Branches Committee, Mr. Handel Davies, had both sent their sincere apologies that they were unable to be present.

He would also like to extend a special welcome to three members of the Preston Branch, Mr. Turner, Mr. Swales and Mr. Dyson. They were rather “ out on a limb” in Belfast, rather far from other Branches and they did appreciate this neighbourly gesture from the Preston Branch. He would also like to welcome their own President of the Belfast Branch, Sir Matthew Slattery, and their Vice-President, Mr. C. P. T. Lipscomb.

But this was essentially a Royal Aeronautical Society function and not a Belfast Branch function. Therefore he would invite Mr. E. T. Jones, the President-elect of the Royal Aeronautical Society, to take the Chair and to conduct the meeting.

Mr. E. T. Jones: It was a great pleasure and honour to be in Belfast that evening deputising for Mr. Rowe. They had already heard from Mr. Keith-Lucas that Mr. Rowe was unable to be present and he had asked him also to express his regrets.

People working in aeronautics were sometimes liable to overlook the fact that materials had played a tremendous part in the advancement that they had achieved. They knew that the aerodynamicist, the structural engineer, the propulsion engineer, had all made their mark on the progress of aviation but they must not forget that materials had forged a very great key towards the progress which had been made. Indeed he recollected that Sir Harry Garner, in his Wilbur Wright Lecture in 1952, made the statement that he doubted whether the Aircraft Industry today could make a much more forward aeroplane than the Wright Brothers did in 1903 if they were confined to the use of the same materials and to the same stalling speed. He thought that statement would have been a very profound one even if stalling speed had been left out. If one considered the materials that people in those days had to work on it was wonderful that they flew at all. Thus he thought it was fitting that they should have a lecture of the kind Mr. Forrest and Mr. Gunn were to give.

He had a pleasant duty to introduce the lecturers. Mr. Forrest was educated at London University and joined the National Physical Laboratory in 1925, or thereabouts, in the Engineering Division. In 1936 he joined the Northern Aluminium Company and he later transferred to the Aluminium Laboratories Ltd. He was now an Associate Director of Research in the Aluminium Laboratories Ltd. at Banbury. Mr. Forrest had impressed upon him that he should make a point of saying Banbury because there were three Laboratories of the firm. Mr. Gunn was educated at the Royal School of Mines. He joined the Northern Aluminium Company in 1944 and he too transferred to the Aluminium Laboratories in 1946. He did not know quite how they proposed to deal with the Lecture, but he thought that Mr. Forrest would read it and both would be available to reply to the questions.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Aeronautical Society 1956

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1. Bailey, G. L. and Baker, W. A. (1949). Melting and Casting of Non-ferrous Metals. Symposium on Metallurgical Aspects of Non-ferrous Metal Melting and Casting of Ingots for Working. Institute of Metals, Monograph and Report Series No. 6, 1949.Google Scholar
2. Mackie, A. M. Aluminium Laboratories Limited. Unpublished work.Google Scholar
3. Roth, A., Welsh, M. and Rohrig, H. (1942). Internal Stresses in Continuously Cast Billets of Eutectic Al-Si Alloy. Aluminium, No. 24, p. 206, 1942.Google Scholar
4. James Booth and Company Ltd. Improvements In and Relating to Extruding Aluminium Alloys. Patent No. 689,051.Google Scholar
5.Société d'Électro-Chimie, d'Electro-Metallurgie et des Acieries Electriques d'Ugine, and Comptoir Industrial d'Etirage et Profilage de Metaux. Improvements In or Relating to Extrusion of Metals. Patent No. 607,285.Google Scholar
6. Smith, C. and Crowther, J. (1955). The Production of Large Forgings in Aluminium Alloys. Journal of the Royal Aeronautical Society, No. 537, Vol. 59, p. 604, September 1955.Google Scholar
7. Edmunds, W. T. and Lloyd, R. C. (1955). The Production of Light Alloy Drop Forgings, Their Heat Treatment, Inspection and Testing. Journal of the Institute of Metals, Vol. 83, Part 6, p. 247, February 1955.Google Scholar
8. Forrest, G. (1954). Internal or Residual Stresses in Wrought Aluminium Alloys and Their Structural Significance. Journal of the Royal Aeronautical Society, Vol. 58, No. 520, p. 261, April 1954.Google Scholar
9. Wilson, C. (1955). Quenching Conditions. Aircraft Production, p. 72, February 1955.Google Scholar
10. High Duty Alloys Ltd. and Hanstock, R. F. (1952). A Method of Reducing the Residual Stresses Developed in Metal Objects by Rapidly Cooling or Quenching Them. Patent Specification No. 683,088, 1952.Google Scholar
11. Anonymous (1955). Deep Freezing of Aluminum Castings. Canadian Metals, p. 40, September 1955.Google Scholar
12. Alexander, J. M. Aluminium Laboratories Ltd. Unpublished work.Google Scholar
13. Baldwin, W. M. (1949). Residual Stresses in Metals. Proc. A.S.T.M., p. 539, Vol. 49, 1949.Google Scholar
14. Richards, D. G. (1945). A Study of Certain Mechanically Induced Residual Stresses. Society of Experimental Stress Analysis, Vol. 3, No. 1, p. 40, 1945.Google Scholar
15. Smack, J. C. (1954). Immersed Ultrasonic Inspection with Automatic Scanning and Recording or Warning Signal. Non-Destructive Testing, p. 29, May-June 1954.Google Scholar
16. Dix, E. H. (1949). Thermal Treatment of Aluminum Alloys. Physical Metallurgy of Aluminum Alloys, p. 200. Published by American Society for Metals, 1949.Google Scholar
17. Van Horn, K. R. (1955). Factors Affecting Directional Properties in Aluminum Wrought Products. Trans. Amer. Soc. for Metals, Vol. 47, p. 38, 1955.Google Scholar
18. Templin, R. L. (1954). Fatigue of Aluminum. Proc. A.S.T.M., Vol. 54, p. 641, 1954.Google Scholar
19. Teed, P. L. (1949). Materials from the Aircraft Manufacturer's Point of View. Second International Aeronautical Conference, New York, 1949, p. 242. Institute of Aeronautical Sciences, New York, 1949.Google Scholar
20.Northern Aluminium Company Ltd. Fatigue Properties of Light Alloy Sheet Materials and the Influence of Aluminium Cladding. Ministry of Aircraft Production Sci. and Tech. Memo. No. 3/42.Google Scholar
21. Barlow, D. A. (1956). Formability of Aluminium Alloys. Engineering, Vol. 181, Nos. 4705, 4706, 4707, pp. 329, 366 and 393.Google Scholar
22. Forrest, G. (1955). The Fatigue Properties of Aluminium Alloys. University of Nottingham Symposium on Fatigue of Metals, 1955.Google Scholar
23. Gunn, K. and Michell, D. F. (1953). Bending Structural Sections. Aircraft Production, Vol. XV, No. 182, p. 444, December 1953.Google Scholar
24.Northern Aluminium Company Ltd. Influence of Cold Forming on the Mechanical Properties of Extruded Aluminium Alloys. Ministry of Aircraft Production Sci. and Tech. Memo. No. 2/42.Google Scholar