It isn't 'cast 7075.' This alloy as-cast has a terrible microstructure & I guesstimate the mechanical properties as about YS 25 ksi, TS 30 ksi, notched Charpy 1.5 ft-lb, and fatigue strength maybe 5 ksi at 5 x 10
8 cycles in R. R. Moore type test of smooth specimens. Criminal if such material flies (except as cargo)! Note: Try searching MatWeb by composition for a similar Al casting alloy – you won't find one. Maybe looks like a casting due to shot peening. Follow the advice above & track down the actual specifications.
7075 solidifies over the range 635 to 477
oC, with lots of segregation between higher melting intermetallics and a low temperature eutectic. Ingot intermetallics (DC cast, ~16
oC/sec) are (Fe,Cr)Al
3, (Fe,Cr)
3SiAl
12, Mg
2Si, Mg(Zn
2,AlCu) and CrAl
7. It cannot be completely homogenized by heat treatment – significant hot working is required to break up and distribute the intermetallics. Also, Fe does not diffuse to any significant extent in the Al matrix below 400
oC, and Mn and Cr only above 500-550
oC.
--- Refs: various Metals Handbooks (phase diagrams, metallography & non-ferrous alloys), Aluminum Vol. I (1967), and Aluminum: Technology, Application and Environment, 6th Edn. (1998).
To avoid the casting microstructural problems, alternative methods include powder metallurgy using rapidly solidified powder, and more recently, thixotropic casting (stir casting) and spray casting. Note that in the article referenced by
prost above, squeeze casting didn't solve the segregation problem (nor would HIP).
A few interesting articles on 7075 production and microstructure:
“For 70 years, aluminium alloys have been the materials of choice for both military and commercial aircraft structures. The ingot metallurgy (IM) alloys of the 2000 (Al-Cu-Mg) and 7000 (Al-Zn-Mg-Cu) series used thus far show several disadvantages caused by the production process. Such problems are primarily coarse intermetallic constituent phases, coarse grains, and macrosegregation, resulting in low fracture toughness.”
Mechanical Properties of Spray Cast 7XXX Series Aluminium Alloys (2002)
Properties Of 7075 Aluminium Alloy Extruded From Rapidly Solidified Flakes And Conventional Atomised Powder [abstract] (1984)
'Effects of Dispersoid Particles on Toughness of High Strength 7000 Aluminum Alloys'
“Q: Why is aluminum alloy 7075 not listed in AWS D1.2, Structural Welding Code - Aluminum?
A: Most aluminum alloys are weldable, but a fair number of them are not, including 7075 aluminum....However, 7075 should not be used for structural work.”
[Of course, 7075 is weldable, but the results are often bad. Layers of liquid may form parallel to surface, along the rolling or extrusion direction.]
Thermal Stability of Rapidly Solidified Alloys of Aluminium with Transition Metals [1st page only] (2006)
Finally, you can identify 7075 by its speckled olive coloration when hard anodized. And, the intermetallics, if not well broken up/dispersed/homogenized, will appear as blisters in the anodize.