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Taper Heating |
A staged or gradient heating. |
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Taper Seal Die |
A type of hollow die using a taper
or conical angle to seal the die and its ring. |
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Tear, Speed |
A series of surface cracks perpendicular
to the extruding direction. Speed tearing normally occurs
in corner radii or extremities of a section and is caused
by localized high temperature. |
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Tearing |
Typically cracks or separations due
to high extrusion speed or extrusion temperature. |
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Telescoping |
Lateral stacking, primarily in one
direction, of wraps in a coil so that the edges of the
coil are conical rather than flat. Improper alignment
of rolls over which the metal passes before rewinding
is a typical cause. See also Oscillation. |
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Temper |
The combination of hardness and strength
imparted to a metal by mechanical or thermal treatments
and characterized by certain metallurgical structures
and mechanical properties determining temper designation. |
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Tensile Strength |
In tensile testing, the ratio of
maximum load to original cross-sectional area. Also
called Ultimate Strength. |
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Thermal Conductivity |
The ability of a material to transmit
heat through its bulk and, by direct contact, to other
substances. Aluminum is a good heat conductor and is
widely used in cookware and in radiators and other heat
exchangers. |
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Tolerance |
Allowable deviation from a nominal
or specified dimension. |
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Tongue |
That portion of die cap metal surrounded
by the aperture except at one end which is termed the
base of the tongue. |
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Tongue (of an extrusion die) |
An area of a die surrounded on three
sides by the extrusion aperture. |
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Tongue Cave |
Distortion of the die tongue. |
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Tongue and Groove Joint |
A joint in which one part has a groove
which receives a projection (tongue) on the other part,
shaped to fit snugly. |
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Tonnage |
Press hydraulic pressure times cylinder
area, expressed in U.S. tons. |
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Tool |
A term usually referring to the dies,
mandrels, etc., used in the production of extruded or
drawn profiles or tube. |
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Tools or Tooling |
The parts of an extrusion press that
are changed to produce a specific shape. Tools include
dies and mandrels, and various supporting parts.
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Tool Deflection |
See Deflection. The distortion,
displacement or caving in the extrusion direction of
the extrusion die or tool surface under extrusion pressure.
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Tool Rub |
A surface area showing a scratch
or abrasion resulting from contact of the hot extrusion
with the press equipment or tooling or, in the case
of multi-hole dies, with other sections as they exit
the press. |
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Tooling Plate |
A cast or rolled product of rectangular
cross section of thickness 0.250 inch or greater, and
with edges either as-cast, sheared or sawed, with internal
stress levels controlled to achieve maximum stability
for machining purposes in tool and jig applications. |
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Topcoat |
In a multi-coat system, the coat
applied over a primer, usually the final coat applied. |
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Torn Surface |
A deep longitudinal rub mark resulting
from abrasion by extrusion or drawing tools. |
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Toxicity |
The degree to which a substance is
toxic, or poisonousness. |
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Traffic Mark |
Abrasion which results from relative
movement between contacting metal surfaces during handling
and transit. A dark color from the abrasively produced
aluminum oxide is usually observed. A mirror image of
a traffic mark is observed on the adjacent contacting
surface. |
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Transverse Direction |
A direction perpendicular to the
direction of working. |
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Transverse Weld |
A condition existing within an extrusion
which is created by the interface of two separate billets.
In practice the interface is extruded at different rates
through the die and is formed into a conical or pointed
configuration within a portion of the extrusion. |
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Tread Plate |
Sheet or plate having a raised figured
pattern on one surface to provide improved traction. |
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Trend |
A gradual, systematic change with
time or other variables. |
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Trim Inclusion |
Edge trimming accidentally wound
into a roll of foil. |
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Tube |
A hollow wrought product that is
long in relation to its cross section, which is symmetrical
and is round, a regular hexagon or octagon, elliptical,
or square or rectangular with sharp or rounded corners,
and that has uniform wall thickness except as affected
by corner radii. |
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Tube Bloom |
This term is not recommended. The
term Tube Stock is preferred. |
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Tube Stock |
A semi-finished tube suitable for
the production of drawn tube. |
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Tube, Alclad |
Composite tube composed of an aluminum
alloy core having on either the inside or outside surface
a metallurgically bonded aluminum or aluminum alloy
coating that is anodic to the core, thus electrolytically
protecting the core against corrosion. |
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Tube, Arc-Welded |
Tube made from sheet or plate butt
welded by either gas-tungsten or gas-metal arc-welding
method, with or without the use of filler metal. |
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Tube, Brazed |
A tube produced by forming and seam-brazing
sheet. |
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Tube, Butt-Welded |
A welded tube, the seam of which
is formed by positioning one edge of the sheet against
the other for welding. |
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Tube, Drawn |
A tube brought to final dimensions
by drawing through a die. |
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Tube, Embossed |
A tube the outside surface of which
has been roll-embossed with a design in relief regularly
repeated in a longitudinal direction. |
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Tube, Extruded |
A tube formed by hot extruding. |
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Tube, Finned |
Tube which has integral fins or projects
protruding from its outside surface. |
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Tube, Fluted |
A tube of nominally uniform wall
thickness having regular, longitudinal, concave corrugations
with sharp cusps between corrugations. |
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Tube,
Heat-Exchanger |
A tube for use in apparatus in which
fluid inside the tube will be heated or cooled by fluid
outside the tube. The term usually is not applied to
coiled tube or to tubes for use in refrigerators or
radiators. |
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Tube, Helical-Welded |
A welded tube produced by winding
the sheet to form a closed helix and joining the edges
of the seam by welding. |
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Tube, Lap-Welded |
A welded tube the seam of which is
formed by longitudinally lapping the edges of the sheet
for welding. |
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Tube, Lock-Seam |
A tube produced by forming and mechanically
lock-seaming sheet. |
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Tube, Open-Seam |
A shape normally produced from sheet
of nominally uniform wall thickness and approximately
tubular form but having a longitudinal unjointed seam
or gap of width not greater than 25 percent of the outside
diameter or greatest over-all dimension. Also referred
to as Butt-Seam Tube. |
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Tube, Redraw |
This term is not recommended. The
term Tube Stock is preferred. |
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Tube, Seamless |
Tube that does not contain any line
junctures (metallurgical welds) resulting from the method
of manufacture. This product may be produced by die-and-mandrel
or by hot-piercer processes. Tube produced by porthole-die
extrusion, bridge-die extrusion, or welding processes
is generally not considered Seamless. (Seamless tube
is typically used for fluid-carrying applications under
pressure.) |
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Tube, Sized |
A tube that, after extrusion, has
been cold drawn a slight amount to minimize ovality. |
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Tube, Stepped Drawn |
A drawn tube whose cross section
changes abruptly in area at intervals along its length. |
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Tube, Structural |
Tube commonly used for structural
purposes. |
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Tube, Welded |
A tube produced by forming and seam-welding
sheet longitudinally. |
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Tubing,
Electrical Metallic |
A tube having certain standardized
length and combinations of outside diameter and wall
thickness thinner than that of Rigid Conduit, commonly
designated by nominal electrical trade sizes, for use
with compression-type fittings as a protection for electric
wiring. |
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Tubing Product |
A general term comprising tube, hollow
profiles, and semi-hollow profiles. |
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Tubular Conductor |
A tubular product suitable for use
as an electric conductor. |
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Twist |
(1) For rolled products, a winding
departure from flatness. (2) For extrusions, a winding
departure from straightness. |
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Two-Tone |
A sharp color demarcation in the
appearance of the metal due to a difference in the work
roll coating. |
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© 1999 AEC
Last Updated on 7/15/99
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