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Re: Roll bar material

To: Fot@autox.team.net
Subject: Re: Roll bar material
From: portermd@zianet.com
Date: Fri, 14 May 2004 22:46:12 -0600
MARK J WEATHERS writes: 

> low carbon steel and mild steel and 1020 etc are the same basic thing. I
> have no idea what chrome-moly steel is either but it sounds cool when you
> say it.

Sounds like a need for a terminology post.  You're correct that low-carbon 
steel, mild steel and 1020 are roughly the same thing. But, 1020 is a 
specific grade of mild steel, just as 1010 and 1012 are. The 1000 series is 
composed of all low-carbon, malleable steels, with slightly varying amounts 
of carbon and alloying elements. 

"Chrome-moly" steel is usually the term for AISI 4130, although it can also 
mean 4140. Ask for chrome-moly tubing and you'll likely get 4130, since 4140 
is normally used not for tubing (doesn't draw quite as well as 4130) but is 
used in billet form for cranks, etc. 

ERW stands for electric resistance welded.  This grade is probably 
permissible under some rules for roll bars, but will probably require a 
thicker wall to meet the rules than seamless. Seamless, of course, is 
considerable more expensive. If you can't afford the weight, check the rules 
and see if a lighter wall seamless is equivalent to a heavier wall ERW. ERW 
is rolled and the seam electrically welded--therefore, it's not quite as 
strong as seamless, if all other specifications are the same. 

I may have mentioned previously that while the rules may allow 4130 for roll 
bars, it's not recommended, for a couple of reasons. Because of the 
extremely low elongation of the material, the difference between the points 
of yield and failure is small--that means that if it fails, it doesn't bend 
much--it snaps. Pieces of it can break loose and become spears. Not 
something I'd like in a roll cage. The other detriment in fabrication is 
that the material work-hardens with welding, and requires rather uniform and 
precise annealing for at least a foot each direction from each weld. 
Difficult to do with a large piece such as a roll bar or cage, and 
especially so if some of the welding has to occur in the car. 

Mild steel, because of its malleability, yields much more easily, but it 
doesn't fail catastrophically--it gives, bends, bends some more, all the 
while absorbing energy. It welds easily and doesn't require extensive 
annealing because it doesn't have enough carbon in it to noticeably 
work-harden. 

Cheers. 

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