A tube will increase structural rigidity because of the increase in diameter. A tube of the same weight increases in stiffness geometrically with increases in diameter. A half-inch tube with a .065 wall thickness will let you press in 3/8" round stock for the end connections. McMaster sells it in 304 stainless in "medium-hard" condition, meaning it will be stronger than tubing used for plumbing purposes (which is supposed to be easy to bend--once). And I think it will deflect about 20% under the same load as if using a 5/16" solid rod of the same material, which is very roughly similar in weight.bloke wrote: ↑Wed Feb 01, 2023 9:44 pm
This is really off topic, and - as this will derail for a couple of posts, I hope it gets right back on track...
I put two floor pegs on my cimbasso to avoid rotation, but - even though they are of a fairly stiff alloy of stainless steel according to specs compared to others, they still flex. I guess I'm going to have to go to something larger in diameter other than stainless steel, because (current are 8mm) something like 3/8 in diameter stainless steel would start getting really ridiculous, but I'm going need to find something that's within a diameter that's manageable yet not flexible. I'm guessing I'm going to need to go to something larger that is hollow with a fairly thick wall.
By the way, the difference in stiffness between various alloys of steel (stainless or not) is quite small--probably unnoticeable compared to the difference between steels as a class and, say, brass or aluminum. Less-stiff stainless alloys like 304 have a stiffness modulus of 28 million psi, while carbon steel is only slightly greater at 29 million psi. Brass is 15, nickel-silver might be 18, and aluminum is about 10. Strength is a whole other thing. Stiffness controls how much it deflects under stress (officially, how much in strains in inches per inch, for a given stress in psi), while strength is the stress at which it becomes plastic and deforms permanently or ruptures (whichever comes first). Stainless is tough--it's gooey and the opposite of brittle--but non-stainless steel can be stronger (and more brittle). The range there can be as little as 30,000 psi and as high as over 200,000 psi. Tungsten carbide has twice the stiffness and density as steel, and can be orders of magnitude stronger. But it is brittle--it doesn't yield, it shatters.
Rick "uses mostly tungsten carbide tooling in the new lathe" Denney