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  • Titanium grade? thickness?

    hi all

    what grade and thickness should i look at for feather weight body armour? it has to obviosly not bend and be easily used for a lifter arm. also the previso armour 3mm aluminium suffered bably from big impacts (intentional of course), so with this armour i dont want the same problem

    any help/

    thanks alex

  • #2
    Titanium grade? thickness?

    Depends on what capabilities on working the stuff you have.
    Can you weld it? If yes, you want grade 2 or 3.
    If no, you are limited to bolting or rivetting it to a chassis/frame. Then the higher grades are fun.

    Weigth for weight, titanium is twice as heavy as ali, and 2/3ths the weight of steel/hardox.
    That gives you, if you just replace the ali, without change in weight, 1.5mm Ti.

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    • #3
      Titanium grade? thickness?

      yeh i think i can get it weleded, but would 1.5mm be strong enogh? or were you just give an example?

      alex

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      • #4
        Titanium grade? thickness?

        The raptor Nebelwerfer used 1.2mm Ti as armor over 5mm HDPE. The Finnish raptor Projudju ripped the Ti appart as if it was butter.

        I just gave a comparisation of what you would do by just replacing the ali.
        So 1.5mm in a feather is ok-ish as long you dont go against spinners.

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        • #5
          Titanium grade? thickness?

          i was thinking, if the weight allows 3 or 4mm, will this stand up to spinners (if i ever face any)

          alex

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          • #6
            Titanium grade? thickness?

            Should do but then it depends on the spinner and on the circumstances of the hit. These things are always guess work.

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            • #7
              Titanium grade? thickness?

              4mm Ti is 15mm HDPE in weight. I know what I would use.

              HDPE is a lot cheaper, easier to work with and strangely enough, more resilient to dents.

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              • #8
                Titanium grade? thickness?

                and if you have a friendly dutch roboteer available, repairable

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                • #9
                  Titanium grade? thickness?

                  Gary, Im Flemish.

                  But yes, with the right tools, HDPE is a nice material. It can be worked like wood, with the advantage of being weldable, bendable and virtualy unbreakable. Disadvantage, in some cases, is the fact it has a memory. It always will try to bend into the original shape.
                  This gave us nice surprises in the past. Like a wheel from TAN that went from crooked to straight after a few hours.

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                  • #10
                    Titanium grade? thickness?

                    woops sorry mario

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                    • #11
                      Titanium grade? thickness?

                      And lets not forget wood. 30 mm of oak or mahogany will stand up to any feather spinner Ive yet encountered.

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                      • #12
                        Titanium grade? thickness?

                        absolutely. Wood is very underrated in robotwars.

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                        • #13
                          Titanium grade? thickness?

                          is titanium easy to drill? to secure the pannels to the frame i thought about using bolts, but the way i want to do it wont let me put a nut on, and i tap the holes and do it that way? the frame is stainless steel box section

                          thanks alex

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                          • #14
                            Titanium grade? thickness?

                            Rivnuts rule the world !!!

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                            • #15
                              Titanium grade? thickness?

                              I have about 500 of them in Obsidian to prove it.

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