Royce Bottom Bracket Bolts

WD Pro

Gold Trader
Feedback
View
Hi,

What material were the Royce bottom bracket bolts, or were there options ?

I have just bought a set, flatted them down and polished them up :D

They polished up like titanium but feel quite heavy like stainless ? They are quite chunky though which could be confusing the hand scales :LOL:

Cheers,

WD :D
 
Thanks :cool:

But it doesn't help :LOL:

The design I have is available in both stainless and Ti ... :LOL:

Looks like Ti, polishes like Ti, the hand scales say they are stainless :D

I am thinking they could be a nice / posh grade of stainless - confusing the appearance a little with Ti ?

WD :D
 
Yeah, they are defo not the ally versions - to heavy and there would be nothing left of them now with how much I polished the heads :LOL: Much to hard / difficult to polish for alloy :D

Ti or stainless, either is good - would just like to know either way :D

And no need for the :oops: You didn't misrepresent them so all is cool here :cool:

WD :D
 
If they're steel then they'll be magnetic. Ti then they won't be.
 
:oops: I didn't know that. However a quick google search found this:

"It is commonly stated that “stainless steel is non-magnetic”. This is not strictly true and the real situation is rather more complicated. The degree of magnetic response or magnetic permeability is derived from the microstructure of the steel. A totally non-magnetic material has a relative magnetic permeability of 1. Austenitic structures are totally non-magnetic and so a 100% austenitic stainless steel would have a permeability of 1. In practice this is not achieved. There is always a small amount of ferrite and/or martensite in the steel and so permeability values are always above 1. Typical values for standard austenitic stainless steels can be in the order of 1.05 – 1.1. See Composition effects on the magnetic permeability of austenitic stainless steels

It is possible for the magnetic permeability of austenitic steels to be changed during processing. For example, cold work and welding are liable to increase the amount of martensite and ferrite respectively in the steel. A familiar example is in a stainless steel sink where the flat drainer has little magnetic response whereas the pressed bowl has a higher response due to the formation of martensite particularly in the corners.

In practical terms, austenitic stainless steels are used for “non-magnetic” applications, for example magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). In these cases, it is often necessary to agree a maximum magnetic permeability between customer and supplier. It can be as low as 1.004.

Martensitic, ferritic, duplex and precipitation hardening steels are magnetic."

So stainless bolts may be faintly magnetic. Possibly not enough for a normal magnet to detect though.
 
Been on countless boats all of which were dripping in stainless. Its not magnetic ;)
Though if it was taken literally in a scientific sense then we might as well add that water is non conductive :D
 
Back
Top