gmchenry
Member
Titanium isn't brittle. It can be amazingly elastic. Ever have titanium/nickel alloy eyeglass frames that you can twist like a pretzel and they return to their original shape?
Titanium cylinders often have difficulty with releasing empty cartridges as they can expand under load and then return to their unstressed dimension making the empty brass tight in the cylinder.
Scandium alloy is also some tough stuff. The Russians first figured out how tough scandium alloys were when they were trying to figure out a way to prevent the aluminum fins on their submarine launched missiles from ripping off as the missiles penetrated arctic ice.
If you have a load that will do that kind of damage to a Ti/Scan revolver, it doesn't matter what you make a revolver out of, it's not going to end well.
Titanium cylinders often have difficulty with releasing empty cartridges as they can expand under load and then return to their unstressed dimension making the empty brass tight in the cylinder.
Scandium alloy is also some tough stuff. The Russians first figured out how tough scandium alloys were when they were trying to figure out a way to prevent the aluminum fins on their submarine launched missiles from ripping off as the missiles penetrated arctic ice.
If you have a load that will do that kind of damage to a Ti/Scan revolver, it doesn't matter what you make a revolver out of, it's not going to end well.