- Joined
- Feb 24, 2015
- Messages
- 1,382
[Wreck slipped so some duplicaton]
Thanks, Wreck. I did some Googling after I asked the question.
For clarification, W designation is Water, the number after is carbon content.
There are three that I know of, W (Water), A (Air) and O (Oil).
When I purchased some drill rod from Enco, I noticed that the O rod was slightly less expensive than the A rod. I was mostly buying it to be consistent, smooth, straight rod to fabricate with. Since I was getting a selection from 1/8 to 1/2, I chose the O rod, as money was a factor.
My understanding, is that A rod hardens with slow cooling, so if you get it hot while you are working it, it will harden as it cools in air, where O and W rod, requiring respectively faster cooling to harden, stay annealed a little better, so are slightly easier (less complicated) to forge and machine, and can be easily re-annealed.
Thanks, Wreck. I did some Googling after I asked the question.
For clarification, W designation is Water, the number after is carbon content.
There are three that I know of, W (Water), A (Air) and O (Oil).
When I purchased some drill rod from Enco, I noticed that the O rod was slightly less expensive than the A rod. I was mostly buying it to be consistent, smooth, straight rod to fabricate with. Since I was getting a selection from 1/8 to 1/2, I chose the O rod, as money was a factor.
My understanding, is that A rod hardens with slow cooling, so if you get it hot while you are working it, it will harden as it cools in air, where O and W rod, requiring respectively faster cooling to harden, stay annealed a little better, so are slightly easier (less complicated) to forge and machine, and can be easily re-annealed.
Last edited: