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On Sat, 18 Jul 2015 00:50:28 -0400, Wayne.B wrote: On Fri, 17 Jul 2015 18:58:16 -0500, Boating All Out wrote: Aluminum welded products will fail at the weld under stress. Welded aluminum is about 50% weaker than unwelded aluminum. Skill has a lot to do with it and my info is from a highly skilled welder specializing in aluminum. This is commonly handled by designing a heavier weld structure, so it can't be seen as a disadvantage - unless you just don't like aluminum. http://www.kastenmarine.com/alumVSsteel.htm === Nice analysis of the design trade offs, thanks. The biggest knock on aluminum in my opinion is susceptibility to corrosion. It can be managed but it takes vigilance regarding electrical faults, repairs and debris in the bilge. I have a 40 year old aluminum boat that lived pretty much all of it's life in salt water and it is doing OK. It is welded together Part depends on the alloy. Either 50xx or 60xx for salt. Minimal copper in the alloy. 60xx is hard to work. |
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