For any
production hinges a tolerance is required between diameter of the orifice and
diameter of the pin in order to avoid having to reject lots of parts that have
too much friction. For this reason, the amount of play in Carbinge vs
aluminum is likely to be similar. In either case, you can substitute
different size pins in order to diminish the play.
A major and
important difference between the two is that with aluminum hinges I don’t
think you can avoid corrosive wear of the inside diameter of the hinge over
time. Therefore aluminum hinges will always become looser over time and
will tend to develop the play being discussed even if during installation the
parts are match fit to avoid play.
Carbinge in
our tests does not wear over time. The fit at installation should remain
the same.
In either
case, the pin itself can corrode. This will usually result in the pin
being more difficult to remove because of rust deposits on the pin. It
is good with Carbinge applications to occasionally remove the pins and clean
them with Scotchbrite before re-inserting. Stainless Steel pins can
decrease this concern but they tend to be more brittle and can fail due to
breakage in some applications.
Regards,
John
Barrett
Leading
Edge
Composites