I'm using W1 tool steel rod for a new push pull changer replacement axle.
Is this hard enough for wear resistance or does it need to be heat treated?
Old worn axle and new axle:

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Moderator: J D Sauser
Aluminum on pretty mucch anything ain’t good. Even on nylon/delron too much gap is required for it not to bind.Ivan Funk wrote:Thanks JD. Great info.
Yeah aluminum on steel is not good.
If I was a builder I'd look into brass bearing inserts in aluminum fingers. Has anyone done that? Or maybe bronze Oilite?
...
I have a Promat built in Serbia. It's a copy of an Emmons with metric parts.J D Sauser wrote:When I was in Tech-U. in Switzerland…. too many years ago, one of the many rules we were taught was which metals do and which do NOT “run” well on each others.
While steel on cast iron “runs” Ok on each other, and steel on steel can be “acceptable” provided good lubrication, aluminum on just about anything (including steel) is a definite “hell NO!”. aluminum really “runs” on nothing without sooner or later binding or ripping.
Most steel manufacturers do not seem to have attended the same school and our instrument is littered with mainly aluminum moving on steel or worse aluminum counter parts, all with the predicted wear and tear. 90’s Sierra Sessions even had aluminum rods clamoed into aluminum “clam” brackets for “quick” leg attachment. Not only did the aluminum clam-brackets lack the necessary elasticity to operate properly, but the shafts became known to bind and get hopelessly stuck in the fatigued clam-brackets.
We took apart a ZumSteel (one if the better built PSGs) a few years ago which had served 20 years as a daily practice beedroomer in sn climate controlled non-smoker environment. A very comfortable life. The changer fingers were worn out and the steel axle had tear marks under both, the steel scissors and the aluminum changer fingers as well!
We hat to replace both, the shaft and the changer fingers.
I personally used heat treated steel shafts with brass changer fingers on my prototype PSG projects. I don’t have a “good” idea for the steel scissors.
In other words, I don’t have a good recommendation but it’s not so much about the steel type of the axle as it is -in my opinion- about the type of aluminum or material of the changer fingers… JD.
I've never owned an Emmons so I can't really compare.Ivan Funk wrote:Andy - Your Promat looks great. There are some discussions about the tone difference between aluminum fingers vs stainless steel. I know that GFI started out with aluminum and then switched to stainless steel at some point. I gave an early GFI U12 with aluminum fingers. I've never had a guitar with stainless so I don't know what the difference in sound is. I can see how it would wear slower though.
Just to clarify for those who read along without commenting:Bobby D. Jones wrote:From what it says on that spec sheet the rod is annealed.
All Tool Steel, Also commonly called Drill Rod is annealed.
So it can be threaded, Holes, slots or keyways can be machined into the part.
Then be heated to a certain temperature, Quenched in oil or water to be hardened, Then Heat Soaked in an oven to reduce brittleness and make it tough.
I would worry more about the annealed soft rod bending under the string pressure more than I would about the fingers wearing the rod.