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 Distinguishing between stainless and aluminum
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B-Power-B
Penny Pincher Member

USA
111 Posts

Posted - 08/08/2008 :  15:12:15  Show Profile Send B-Power-B a Private Message
I was reading this link in hopes of figuring out how best to distinguish between aluminum and stainless steel :
You must be logged in to see this link.

How do you guys tell if a piece is stainless or aluminum? Can you rely on stainless being magnetic and aluminum not?

-Brian

Those who trade liberty for security have neither.

natsb88
Administrator



USA
1850 Posts

Posted - 08/08/2008 :  16:24:53  Show Profile Send natsb88 a Private Message
Good stainless is not magnetic, so that won't work.

Typically aluminum is much softer than stainless. You can easily bend most aluminum sheet and dent aluminum bars. The exception to easily denting would be cast aluminum, which is usually harder but more brittle than extruded aluminum.

Stainless is much tougher to bend/dent/cut etc.

If the metal is bare, you can also tell by the color and shine. Aluminum has a lighter color and a softer luster. Stainless usually has a more bold luster.

Weight is probably the easiest way to distinguish. Stainless is significantly heavier than aluminum.

Nate
The Copper Cave

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B-Power-B
Penny Pincher Member

USA
111 Posts

Posted - 08/08/2008 :  17:50:23  Show Profile Send B-Power-B a Private Message
So lets say I have 1/2 inch tubing. If I can easily bend it in half, the bet would be that its aluminum. If its heavier, shinny, and/ or tougher to bend/cut, the best bet is that its stainless.

And finally if the tubing breaks in half, the best bet is that its cast aluminum...

I know its hard to say without seeing the piece, but am I on the right track here?

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wavecrazed
Penny Sorter Member



USA
69 Posts

Posted - 08/08/2008 :  18:35:05  Show Profile Send wavecrazed a Private Message
Aluminum will cut like butter with a saw-zall. Stainless will be hard to cut.

scrappin" all over
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B-Power-B
Penny Pincher Member

USA
111 Posts

Posted - 08/08/2008 :  20:23:54  Show Profile Send B-Power-B a Private Message
I usually do not have access to power so I usually use a stihl cutoff saw. I just wish there was some kind of hand held device.... (lame I know, but we all wish we had one)

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n/a
deleted



91 Posts

Posted - 08/09/2008 :  14:39:33  Show Profile Send n/a a Private Message
if you have a grinder...

touch the grinder to aluminum it will not spark
touch it to stainless you will get small sparks

there was a way to use a nail to that a guy at the yard showed me dragging a nail across it with slight pressure the aluminum will dig in and stainless will not.
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B-Power-B
Penny Pincher Member

USA
111 Posts

Posted - 08/09/2008 :  15:32:34  Show Profile Send B-Power-B a Private Message
the grinder and spark thing is a good point. Thanks for that tip. I will try the nail thing as well and see if I can come up with any results.

All these tips are great!

Those who trade liberty for security have neither.
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horgad
1000+ Penny Miser Member



USA
1641 Posts

Posted - 08/09/2008 :  18:06:48  Show Profile Send horgad a Private Message
quote:
Originally posted by clwp

if you have a grinder...

touch the grinder to aluminum it will not spark
touch it to stainless you will get small sparks

there was a way to use a nail to that a guy at the yard showed me dragging a nail across it with slight pressure the aluminum will dig in and stainless will not.



I just took apart a hard-drive today. The main part of the hard-drive case was obviously aluminum, but there was a sheet of metal that acted like a cover screwed onto it. It was not magnetic, but unlike the rest of the hard-drive case it sparked with white sparks when I touched it with a Dremel. So I am not sure what it is. Would you guess a high nickel content stainless or something else?
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natsb88
Administrator



USA
1850 Posts

Posted - 08/09/2008 :  18:27:53  Show Profile Send natsb88 a Private Message
quote:
Originally posted by horgad
I just took apart a hard-drive today. The main part of the hard-drive case was obviously aluminum, but there was a sheet of metal that acted like a cover screwed onto it. It was not magnetic, but unlike the rest of the hard-drive case it sparked with white sparks when I touched it with a Dremel. So I am not sure what it is. Would you guess a high nickel content stainless or something else?


I have one of those as well. I didn't try the spark test but it's too hard to be aluminum. Hmm...

Nate
The Copper Cave

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n/a
deleted



478 Posts

Posted - 08/09/2008 :  21:24:51  Show Profile Send n/a a Private Message
A high power magnet will attract, ever so slightly, to even high grade stainless.
Use a file for the scratch test. A file will rip aluminum to shreds with ease. It will have trouble scratching stainless. A small propane torch like those uses for soldering can also be used. It will melt Aluminum in short order. No way in hell will it melt stainless.

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n/a
deleted



91 Posts

Posted - 08/10/2008 :  00:52:14  Show Profile Send n/a a Private Message
most hd covers are stainless, i have even found a few brass (most brass covers have a brownish tint) i always wait till i get a decent amount of hd cover plates plug in the grinder and check each one
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simplicitycounts
Penny Hoarding Member



USA
535 Posts

Posted - 08/10/2008 :  15:12:09  Show Profile Send simplicitycounts a Private Message
Most of what you will come across is Aluminum. The only stainless I find is broken restaraunt equipment, dented trays, mixing bowls, that kind of stuff.
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B-Power-B
Penny Pincher Member

USA
111 Posts

Posted - 08/10/2008 :  15:17:30  Show Profile Send B-Power-B a Private Message
Currently I have a large project that involves scrapping out a lot of industrial/scientific equipment. I actually have come across stainless ventilation ducts. The stuff I am dealing with now is tubing. I think it was used for some sort of gas, liquid or air ventilation. I will get a picture in the next couple of days, and hopfully you guys can see what I am talking about and why I am sort of cautious of just calling it aluminum

-BB

Those who trade liberty for security have neither.
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n/a
deleted



91 Posts

Posted - 08/10/2008 :  19:33:14  Show Profile Send n/a a Private Message
about 80% of my hd covers are stainless
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horgad
1000+ Penny Miser Member



USA
1641 Posts

Posted - 08/11/2008 :  07:40:18  Show Profile Send horgad a Private Message
quote:
Originally posted by clwp

about 80% of my hd covers are stainless



Thanks, I am learning stuff everyday. I didn't even know before this thread that stainless is not alway magnetic. That explains alot of mystery metals that I have laying around that I couldn't figure out. I am guessing that alot of the screws and pins that I took out the HD case are also stainless.

What do the sparks on brass look like or are you just grinding to see the underlying color?
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natsb88
Administrator



USA
1850 Posts

Posted - 08/11/2008 :  09:10:27  Show Profile Send natsb88 a Private Message
quote:
Originally posted by horgad

quote:
Originally posted by clwp

about 80% of my hd covers are stainless


What do the sparks on brass look like or are you just grinding to see the underlying color?


Brass doesn't spark.

Well, I should say clean brass USUALLY doesn't spark. Never say never...there could be other impurities mixed in.

Nate
The Copper Cave


Edited by - natsb88 on 08/11/2008 09:13:21
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n/a
deleted



91 Posts

Posted - 08/11/2008 :  16:39:06  Show Profile Send n/a a Private Message
correct no spark on brass , you are just trying to take the chrome colored layer off a very small section to see underneath.

you screws are almost always steel
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Saul Mine
Penny Collector Member



USA
343 Posts

Posted - 08/12/2008 :  23:57:26  Show Profile Send Saul Mine a Private Message
All you need is a pocket knife. You can't cut stainless. Watch out for zinc alloys that look just like aluminum.

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Cerulean
Penny Hoarding Member



USA
993 Posts

Posted - 08/13/2008 :  13:30:07  Show Profile Send Cerulean a Private Message
Mohs Hardness Scale, gents.

Stainless steel will scratch aluminum, but aluminum will not scratch stainless steel.

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horgad
1000+ Penny Miser Member



USA
1641 Posts

Posted - 08/13/2008 :  13:51:44  Show Profile Send horgad a Private Message
Good old MOH. I have not ued that since Geology class about 20 years ago. So I think the next logical question is what is the easiest way to tell the difference between cast zinc and aluminum?
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B-Power-B
Penny Pincher Member

USA
111 Posts

Posted - 08/18/2008 :  15:41:51  Show Profile Send B-Power-B a Private Message

Yeah... How do you tell the difference between cast zinc and aluminum.

And is there another way of distinguishing between cast aluminum and aluminum besides trying to snap it in half? What if the pieces are too big to break.

Here are a couple pictures of the type of things I am confused about.
Anyone have any way of telling what they are made of?





Those who trade liberty for security have neither.
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n/a
deleted



91 Posts

Posted - 08/18/2008 :  17:31:18  Show Profile Send n/a a Private Message
cast aluminum will break with a hammer
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Cody8404
Penny Hoarding Member



USA
602 Posts

Posted - 08/18/2008 :  17:41:54  Show Profile Send Cody8404 a Private Message
I had always thought of Aluminum as lighter? than nickel or tin. Stainless is just nickel alloy is it not?


Awake, O kings of the earth! Come ye, O, come ye, with your gold and your silver, to the help of my people, to the house of the daughters of Zion, to the help of the people of the God of this Land even Jesus Christ.
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horgad
1000+ Penny Miser Member



USA
1641 Posts

Posted - 08/18/2008 :  18:52:51  Show Profile Send horgad a Private Message
quote:
Originally posted by clwp

cast aluminum will break with a hammer



That is kind of backwards of what I was thinking. I noticed some stuff is more likely to bend than to break. I figured the brittle porous stuff was likely cast zinc and the stuff the liked to dent and bend more before breaking was aluminum. So I still have issues telling the difference...
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WheatieFan
Penny Pincher Member



USA
106 Posts

Posted - 08/18/2008 :  22:58:44  Show Profile Send WheatieFan a Private Message
I believe most of the conduit couplings are diecast zinc. I saved up a bit, and had a problem telling the difference between that and aluminum. But if you check google for suppliers of new fittings, the ones that tell you the makeup say they are zinc.

WheatieFan
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n/a
deleted



91 Posts

Posted - 08/19/2008 :  17:15:31  Show Profile Send n/a a Private Message
Examples of cast aluminum would be gas grill covers, hard drive cases, some disk drive frames. If you get a second take a hammer to one and get a feel for it.
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