Machining Beryllium
22AERP04_02
04/01/2022
- Content
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Manufacturing workpieces with unique material characteristics can provide machining challenges. The metal beryllium is an excellent example. Beryllium is two-thirds the weight of aluminum and six times as stiff as steel. It has a high melting point and a very low range of thermal expansion. Those attributes deliver performance that is crucial in precision applications such as aircraft components, spacecraft, communication satellites and optics. However, beryllium is also hard and brittle and produces powder instead of chips when machined, therefore requiring special machining techniques to avoid cracking. It is also expensive, about $1,500 a pound. And finally, it is toxic and causes severe allergic reactions in those sensitive to it. As such, only a few shops in the United States are the lone providers of parts made from this tricky material.
One of those is a California shop that combines a deliberate, highly structured production process; data-driven manufacturing analytics; precise and reliable machine tools; and longtime familiarity with processing beryllium to manufacture parts profitably and safely. Founded in 1954, L.A. Gauge Company in Sun Valley, California, is an ultra-precision machining and optic shop focusing on specialty metal fabrication for the aerospace and defense Industry. The shop regularly holds machining tolerances to within 40 millionths of an inch (1 micron), and polishing tolerances to within billionths of an inch (1 Angstrom).
- Pages
- 6
- Citation
- "Machining Beryllium," Mobility Engineering, April 1, 2022.