Duralumin.
Of the different alloys, duralumin is probably the best, although one believes that its qualities are principally the result of special heat treatment. Its use is at present restricted to those parts not subjected to any great tensile strain. It is considerably less than half the weight of steel, bulk for bulk, and, properly used, may effect a considerable saving in weight. The fact that it has not achieved the popularity it deserves may be ascribed to the difficulties experienced in working it, especially for such parts as body clips, where several bends are necessary, and to the rather arbitrary methods in use. If properly annealed, no difficulty should occur in obtaining a reasonably sharp bend. The process recommended by the makers consists in heating the metal in a muffled furnace to a temperature of approximately 350° C., and the necessary work done as soon as possible after cooling. The importance of this is due to the fact that the process of annealing imparts to the metal a tendency to become brittle with time. The writer has often contended that, where duralumin is used, it should be with a real desire to reduce weight. Too often one sees a fitting of such lavish dimensions as to entirely nullify the advantage of the lighter metal.
CHAPTER III.
SPARS AND STRUTS.
Having thus considered generally the chief materials of aircraft construction, we will proceed to examine the various types of spars and struts in present use. The main spars of the wings are by far the most important items of the complete structure, and very great care is always taken to ensure that only the best of materials and workmanship are concerned with their manufacture. Looking back at the days one usually associates with the aero shows at Olympia, multitudinous methods of building wing spars can be recalled. Some composed of three-ply and ash; others, less common, of channel steel; and a few of steel tubing, either plain or wood filled. Various reasons and causes have combined to eliminate these methods of construction. For instance, the spar of channel steel proved much too flexible, although this characteristic was no great disadvantage in those machines employing wing-warping for lateral control, for with this arrangement a certain amount of flexibility in the wing structure is essential. While steel tubing is excellent for many details it can hardly be said to be really suitable for wing spars, which are stressed essentially as beams. Now, the strength of a beam varies as the square of the depth of the beam, and it is obvious that in the case of a circular steel tube the material is evenly distributed about the neutral axis, and therefore its strength in both horizontal and vertical directions is equal; although employed as a strut, this feature becomes of real value. One, however, still encounters its use on modern machines; indeed, it must not be supposed that the progress made in construction generally since 1914 has tended greatly towards a reduction in the number of different methods employed, and this will be realized from a consideration of the accompanying spar sections which are in use to-day on one make of machine or another.