PackardV8
Automotive
- Apr 17, 2006
- 85
Crankshafts - billet steel, forged steel, cast steel, nodular iron, malleable steel and cast iron - what else?
Recently a discussion arose concerning various materials used to make crankshafts and I realize after fifty years of hefting cranks, I don't have all the facts at hand.
We all know about billet steel and forged steel performance crankshafts. A 1970s specification book I just consulted showed OEM shafts in that era all being either forged steel, nodular cast iron or cast iron. The 1955 SAE paper detailing the new Packard V8 specifically states the engineers debated the choice of forging or casting and chose cast steel for the crank.
Here are questions; who's got hard answers with reference sources?
1. Who uses cast steel crankshafts?
2. Given the difficulty of weld repair on cast iron heads and blocks, what physical properties/alloys of the nodular iron and cast iron used in crankshafts make them so easy to weld repair?
jack vines
Recently a discussion arose concerning various materials used to make crankshafts and I realize after fifty years of hefting cranks, I don't have all the facts at hand.
We all know about billet steel and forged steel performance crankshafts. A 1970s specification book I just consulted showed OEM shafts in that era all being either forged steel, nodular cast iron or cast iron. The 1955 SAE paper detailing the new Packard V8 specifically states the engineers debated the choice of forging or casting and chose cast steel for the crank.
Here are questions; who's got hard answers with reference sources?
1. Who uses cast steel crankshafts?
2. Given the difficulty of weld repair on cast iron heads and blocks, what physical properties/alloys of the nodular iron and cast iron used in crankshafts make them so easy to weld repair?
jack vines