Very interesting.....
Jackie thrives in a world where engineering limits are tested daily. Where welds will rip out by the roots and shafts will twist and warp if not fully stable. I live in a construction atmosphere where if a weld breaks on a dozer you just crank up the heat, buy a couple more bundles of stick and pour more metal into the gap......stability via the brute force approach
Which leads me to my conundrum.
I'm using this 12L14 to make prototype muzzle brakes for a couple big guns. Guns that will break ME if a brake fails.
First thing I notice is that the threaded portions strip out easily. That I'm stripping out 1/4-28 grub screws under what to me is moderate tension. Second thing is that deflection both pushing and pulling is a thing........ this stuff machines like butter and moves about like modeling clay.
Drop a piece on the floor and it dings like lead.
Instead of making these brakes as light as possible I'm tending to leave extra meat in the high-stress areas...... let's hope I'm leaving enough !!
I have not found threads in 12L14 to strip out any more readily than those in mild steel. "What to you is moderate tension" is meaningless and condescending - threads have torque specs. Ignore them at your peril! That said, I've had no problem torquing male or female 12L14 threads to spec. I have certainly not seen any of it moving about "like modeling clay". If I drop a piece on the floor it bounces and clangs like most steel. In fact, aside from machining, or a spark test, I'd be hard pressed to separate it from 1018.
I'm not sure what you have, and it's probably not what I'd make a brake out of in any case, but from your description it's not free-machining steel - it's lead!
GsT
Drop a piece on the floor and it dings like lead.
Hey guys, I work with a lot of 12L14 and other alloys in my shop and love how easy it is to machine as well. BUT, do be sure to finish the surfaces afterward. It will rust over very quickly with any moisture/humidity. I find a cold blue treatment keeps the rust at bay pretty well. Unlike the other alloys in my rack, I don't have to worry reading labels on the 12L14 stock, it is always the brown pieces haha!