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Re: [WT] CJ2a Chassis ... is it heat treated ?


Tony G
 

SAE 950 is a high strength low alloy steel HSLA for short used in the
auto industry for chassis and bumpers , GMC truck chassis for example

From

SAE 950 is a high strength, low allow steel. Here are some details:
This type of steel has enhanced
mechanical properties and, in most cases, good resistance to
atmospheric corrosion are obtained by the
addition of moderate amounts of one or more alloying elements other
than carbon. Steels of this type are
normally furnished in the hot rolled or annealed condition to minimum
mechanical properties. They are
not intended for quenching and tempering. Where these steels are used
for fabrication by welding, no
preheat or postheat is required. These steels may be obtained in the
standard shapes or forms normally
available in carbon steel. This steel has a high strength-to -weight
ratio. Typical applications are
automotive bumper face bars, truck bodies, frames and structural
members.
Properties: (for material thickness up to 1/2")
Minimum yield point: 50,000 psi
Minimum tensile strength: 70,000 psi
Info from Machinery's Handbook. (Larry Price 12-30-99)

BUT IT STILL DOESNT SAY IF ITS HEAT TREATED

Can any auto engineers shed light on this ?

Regards

Tony G
Jakarta , Indonesia


--- In WillysTech@..., John Wickersham <johnwick@...>
wrote:

Somewhere in a Willys manual (I forget where) I remember it warning
about over-heating the frame when making repairs. It described the
danger as "taking the life out of the metal." Does that suggest
anything about the nature of the steel being used?

Pineneedle

Tony G <tonyg@...> wrote:
Thanks all

SAE950

This is what I found on



"950 is the old designation according to SAE J1392. The new
designation is 340 according to SAE J2340. The UTS is specified to
be a minimum of 410 MPa. n-value is not a requirement of this
standard, and its value will change with strain. The following
presentation from US Steel shows some data for HSLA 340 steel:


Section=Home&TEMPLATE=/CM/ContentDisplay.cfm&amp;CONTENTFILEID=971
"

I tried filing the steel and I got to say I think there is some
form
of mild heat treatment , I haven't digested the above onfo yet

Regards

Tony G
Jakarta , Indonesia

--- In WillysTech@..., John Barrett <jbarrettII@>
wrote:

Tony,

Good to hear from you again. You don't seem to make it to this
site
much
anymore.

I don't believe that the frame is heat treated. If it was nobody
would
be able to do any welding or repairs on them without creating
weak
spots. You should be just fine with the work you've done.
However,
if
I'm wrong David and Landen will let us both know about it. ;-)

BTW: what happened to the pictures section of your Java Jeep web
site?
It seems to have gone away.

John
'56 Pickup TKER TOY
Cherry Valley, Calif.

Tony G wrote:

Dear WTers

I am doing a long overdue rebuild of FrankenJeep , my CJ2a / MB
conglomeration

The left hand front part of the chassis had a twist and a bend
in
it
which wouldn't come right with a hydraulic ram only and we had
a
heat
up a small 6 inch section of chassis (where it kicks up from the
horizontal near where the clutch would sit) to get it to the
right
position

The question is ... is the chassis heat treated in anyway ?

If yes how can I restore heat treatment to that section on the
chassis ?

Regards

Tony G

Jakarta , Indonesia


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