Hi Everyone; The original forum post from JP83 asked a very general question about which material could he have connecting rods made and what did people in this forum know about the titanium alloys. Personally I think it was an excellent question. There are many materials, many processes, and many heat and surface treatments used to produce connecting rods. There are now some new steel alloys that have exceptional strength to weight values, it would be invaluable if a few material engineers could tell us about these alloys.
My point about titanium is that there is more to titanium then most people know. Some connecting rod manufactures forge their titanium, which is the very best way to manufacture a titanium connecting rod. Some manufacturers are making titanium connecting rods from extruded or billet plate. Titanium in its best alloy and best forging, still only has 70% of the tensile strength of a high strength steel. Titanium in its best alloy and best forging has half the modulus of eleasity of high strength steel. Just from the tensile strength and modulus it should be obvious that titanium in it absolute best alloy and forging is NOT equivalent to high strength steel.
In a race engine, where the titanium connecting rod can be replaced often, titanium could reduce the weight of the connecting rod by 25%. If the titanium was the same dimensions of the steel rod, the weight savings could be as much as 40%.
Are you going to accept a machined, billet titanium connecting rod, or will you want one of the better forged alloys? How many companies have forging dies, and how many can forge titanium? The real question becomes, do you want to pay $10,000.00 for a forging die, plus the cost of machining, heat treating, and surface finishing?
You can purchase a high strength steel rod for $300.00 each, the cost of a titanium specialty rod could easily cost over $1000.00 each. In the end, the ti rod may be lighter, but you will have to replace it more often.
One of the better titanium alloys is called Ti-6246 (Ti-6Al-2Sn-4Zr-6Mo) originally developed by Pratt & Whitney over 35 years ago, and is available from Timet. There is a newer Ti alloy called Ti-200, maybe someone can obtain some info on this alloy?