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  2. Magnalium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magnalium

    Alloys with small amounts of magnesium (about 5%) exhibit greater strength, greater corrosion resistance, and lower density than pure aluminium. Such alloys are also more workable and easier to weld than pure aluminum. [1] Alloys with high amounts of magnesium (around 50%) are brittle and more susceptible to corrosion than aluminum.

  3. Aluminium–magnesium alloys - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aluminiummagnesium_alloys

    Aluminium-magnesium alloys are considered to be very corrosion-resistant, making them suitable for marine applications, but this is only true if the -phase exists as a non-contiguous phase. Alloys with Mg contents below 3% are therefore always corrosion-resistant, with higher contents, appropriate heat treatment must ensure that this phase is ...

  4. List of named alloys - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_named_alloys

    Hiduminium or R.R. alloys (2% copper, iron, nickel): used in aircraft pistons; Hydronalium (up to 12% magnesium, 1% manganese): used in shipbuilding, resists seawater corrosion; Italma (3.5% magnesium, 0.3% manganese): formerly used to make coinage of the Italian lira; Magnalium (5-50% magnesium): used in airplane bodies, ladders, pyrotechnics ...

  5. Magnesium alloy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magnesium_alloy

    Soldering of magnesium alloys is feasible only for plugging surface defects in parts. The solders are even more corrosive than with aluminium, and the parts should never be required to withstand stress. Riveted joints in magnesium alloy structures usually employ aluminium or aluminium-magnesium alloy rivets. Magnesium rivets are not often used ...

  6. Aluminium–magnesium–silicon alloys - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aluminiummagnesium...

    The AlMgSi alloys are therefore understood in the standards as a separate group (6000 series) and not as a subgroup of aluminum-magnesium alloys that cannot be hardenable. AlMgSi is one of the aluminum alloys with medium to high strength, high fracture resistance, good welding suitability, corrosion resistance and formability. They can be ...

  7. Category:Aluminium–magnesium alloys - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Aluminium...

    Aluminiummagnesium alloys are an important group of the aluminium alloys, where magnesium forms a small, but significant, proportion. Pages in category "Aluminiummagnesium alloys" The following 18 pages are in this category, out of 18 total.

  8. Alclad - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alclad

    Alclad is a heat-treated aluminium, copper, manganese, magnesium alloy that has the corrosion resistance of pure metal at the surface and the strength of the strong alloy underneath. Of particular importance is the thorough character of the union between the alloy and the pure aluminium.

  9. Coinage metals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coinage_metals

    Magnesium: Magnesium-aluminum coins were issued in 1943 for the Lodz Ghetto mark in Poland. Magnesium is a minor additive in many aluminum coins; this alloy is called magnalium. Nickel: Used unknowingly in alloys since antiquity. The first pure nickel coin was the Swiss 20 Rappen of 1881.