dfaunce
Aerospace
- Sep 25, 2009
- 8
I'm a young engineer and am still have a lot to learn, so bear with me.
I work in the aerospace industry, specifically water/waste systems. We frequently authorize certain parts to be passivated, seeing that the fabricated parts of our plumbing systems are stainless steel (particularly 304).
(side note: we passivate to AMS 2700 or QQ-P-35).
I understand that when stainless steel is being machined, particulates of iron and other corrosive metals inbed themselves into the stainless steel, so when water runs across our stainless piece, there is potential for corrosion. (correct me if I'm wrong).
I also understand that the result of passivation creates an oxidized film that prevents the metal from corrosion. (correct me if I'm wrong).
I designed a 304SS tube (1.000" OD X .035WT), per AMS5567, 6" long, with a 4" bend radius (45degrees) and both ends are beaded per AS5131, Style A. Water will run through this tube.
I would assume the beading process could possibly create these corrosive particulates, which would mean the tube will require passivation. Is this correct?
If so, what if the tube was NOT beaded. Would it still require passivation
I work in the aerospace industry, specifically water/waste systems. We frequently authorize certain parts to be passivated, seeing that the fabricated parts of our plumbing systems are stainless steel (particularly 304).
(side note: we passivate to AMS 2700 or QQ-P-35).
I understand that when stainless steel is being machined, particulates of iron and other corrosive metals inbed themselves into the stainless steel, so when water runs across our stainless piece, there is potential for corrosion. (correct me if I'm wrong).
I also understand that the result of passivation creates an oxidized film that prevents the metal from corrosion. (correct me if I'm wrong).
I designed a 304SS tube (1.000" OD X .035WT), per AMS5567, 6" long, with a 4" bend radius (45degrees) and both ends are beaded per AS5131, Style A. Water will run through this tube.
I would assume the beading process could possibly create these corrosive particulates, which would mean the tube will require passivation. Is this correct?
If so, what if the tube was NOT beaded. Would it still require passivation