My experience with Al. depends on what I was doing, in "machine shops" it's all pretty standard 6061 T6, in "sheet metal shops it was usually 5052, but one time they office screwed up and got 6061, it was interesting, you could watch the cracks forming as the bend angle increased

since it didn't quite break (By a gnats hair ) they formed it cold, then ran a bead of weld down the break line.
Funny thing, we got a new person to take care of ordering material not long after that.

Peg,
Lexan is like that as well, form it cold it snaps, heat it and form it slow with overbend and when it cools you're OK.
One of our more educational thread drifts

Funny part is that folks who don't work in our fields may find it fascinating . If they try to read up on it there's all kinds of technical terms that make it sound like witch craft, same as other industries.
I was watching "How it's made" one time with friends who did other things, the episode was on Weber grills, they were saying, "Oh, that's neat" Who came up with such tricky machinery" and so on.
I was thinking, "Wow, they use that antiquated stuff, That machine belongs in a museum !"

I kept it to myself but they were looking at me odd for laughing

You guys and Joe know what I mean
