Chang voice:
Why you-ah no aska me? Now yous look silly on the intrawebs.
Monkey Fist Rage
so how much stronger does polishing make the rods? i have some old 1969 and 1970 hot rods magazines and it seemed to be pretty common to polish them (in gas motors) and install good bolts back before aftermarket units were cheap and easily availible .
so how much stronger does polishing make the rods? i have some old 1969 and 1970 hot rods magazines and it seemed to be pretty common to polish them (in gas motors) and install good bolts back before aftermarket units were cheap and easily availible .
Thus making them stronger?
Anything that is not nice and smooth in a vibrating part can be a point where waves in the component will converge and the "stress" at that point can be enough to cause the part to fail. By removing those points (sharp edges in most cases) the stress has the ability to "roll" somewhere else in the part and dissipate safely.
As ghostman said, you aren't inherently making the part stronger than it was when it was made, but less likely to fail when is sees a given power level. Which makes it stronger than the flaws allowed it to be. Shot peening works in a similar way by forcing stress made into a part at the factory to relieve. Same with cryo treating.
You aren't making it stronger as much as removing weakness, which makes IT (whatever it may be) stronger.
I just woke up so flamers go easy.
Monkey Fist Rage
This is the best explanation I have heard as of yet. Dumbed it down enough to where even I could understand why. Question now is, what power levels are we talking about before something like this is truly beneficial? Or is this a high RPM thing?
This is the best explanation I have heard as of yet. Dumbed it down enough to where even I could understand why. Question now is, what power levels are we talking about before something like this is truly beneficial? Or is this a high RPM thing?
He doesn't need his head made any larger.