I am still having trouble finding aluminium at reasonable prices.
Freight is a killer, at about $60 us per piece.
In NZ, no-one is offering to sell small quantities cut-to-size.
I suppose the hobby market is too small, here.
Ex China, I got one piece 6061 dia 60mm x 100mm, $62.84 incl frt and tax (nz) m - about $45 US.
and one piece 7075 40mm x 100mm x 100mm, $104.25 nz, or $74.50 US incl tax (15%)
This is $66.51 usd per kg for the bigger piece, and $56 usd per kg delivered for the smaller piece.
weight-wise?
Considering commodity value is $3.12 usd/kg??
Mind you, alloy, plus retail quantity, will bump this up a lot.
kgs are 0.8 and 1.12.
I think ex shop, cut one-off , 1.5" x 2.5" x 6" was USD $7.20, but USD $60.08 for freight! (ex USA)
total = 67.28 x 1.15 for local tax = $77.32 usd
In kgs this is 38mm x 63 x 150 @ 2800 kg/ cu mt = 3.6 x 10^5 x 2.8 x 10 ^3 = 1.008 kgs approx.
This is about $77 usd per kg delivered (correction)
The China deal seems better, probably due to their cheaper freight rates.
This is delivering mid-march, though, so hardly UPS!
Days roughly 6 + 28 + 6 = 40 days to deliver.
Quite often this is an upper limit, and they can arrive weeks earlier.
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Machining properties:
what are 6061 and 7075 aluminium like to work with?
Do you use this alloy numbering system?
It is common on China sites, but I see the the EU is using something different now.
7075 (alloyed with zinc) seems a lot harder and stronger.
Possibly easier to get a good lathe surface finish?
Does it work-harden?
What is it like for heat resistance?
Some alloys and heat treatments are not good for continued higher temperature use, say 200 degrees C plus?
6061 is usually used for extrusions, and tends to be quite soft.
It is probably difficult to machine nicely on a lathe, and gets bad built-up edge and tearing with HSS tools.
Are tungsten tips any better with this?
I have some tool-grade silver steel and stainless steel here, and it is a bit tricky.
Possibly full flooding with coolant, and tungsten tools, may help.
It hardens very quickly if you drill it with HSS drills.
That stuff can wait until I am better set up with a bigger lathe, a coolant spray system,
and a coolant collection tray.
The coolant probably shoots all over the place, too.
I saw a fully flooded cnc mill setup on you tube, and he had it in a clear acrylic box.
<edit>
my calcs were a bit off:
actual paypal bills were $41.64 for the smaller piece, and $55.43 for the larger piece.
I probably will incur currency charges on top, though.
I will check.
<edit>
back- converting at 1.49,
smaller = 43.40 USD, larger = $54 USD
my initial estimate: 45 and 74.50 was a bit off . maybe I double applied tax at 1.15?
74/1.15 = 64??
so $54/1.12kg = $48 USD/kg, and the smaller piece is 43.40/0.8 = $54 USD per kg.
Still an improvement over $77 usd per kg, total, delivered.
I would have to get someone to collect and re-export it at a lower shipping rate if possible.
Is this very complex re: customs, postage, correct stickers on the package, type of packaging?
Usually this stuff is wrapped in bubble wrap, then put in a self-sealing plastic bag, with a fancy sticker on it.
Then if you want to send it by mail, there is a heavy/bulky goods charge, registered mail charge, etc.
Would it be overall cheaper than $60 USD per kg?
I saw an article on you tube, xjet, where he got a book sent to him by mail, and postage was over $60.
It was a big, heavy book, though.