Titanium Tube Gr9 (Ti-3Al-2.5V) Seamless CWST ERTi-9 up to 2.5m length
Grade 9 titanium is the structural fabricator's dream for lightweight, corrosion resistant components of any size. ERTi-9 Titanium has matching properties to ASTM base metal Grade 9 titanium and also known as the half version of Grade 5 titanium. Used for applications where better ductility, formability and weldability are needed but a lower tensile are acceptable. Often used in oil production, aircraft honeycomb foil, piping and pressure vessels frames and hydraulic system tubing, as well as sports equipment, including tennis rackets, bicycles and golf clubs.
Seamless, CWST tubing in stock, or made-to-order.
Pipe stock is 2.5 meters (98.4 inches) long. Additional shipping charges may apply for oversize/over dimension lengths.
All tubes are Cold-Worked Stress-Relieved condition – typical for high-performance bicycle frames, aerospace hydraulics, and structural applications.
Material Properties – CWSR Condition:
| Property | Value (Metric) | Value (US) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ultimate Tensile Strength (UTS) | 900 – 965 MPa | 130 – 140 ksi | Min 860 MPa / 125 ksi |
| 0.2% Yield Strength | 760 – 860 MPa | 110 – 125 ksi | Min 725 MPa / 105 ksi |
| Elongation (in 50 mm / 2 in) | 10 – 15 % | 10 – 15 % | |
| Modulus of Elasticity | 110 GPa | 16.0 × 10⁶ psi | |
| Shear Modulus | ~42 GPa | ~6.1 × 10⁶ psi | |
| Poisson’s Ratio | 0.32 | 0.32 | |
| Density | 4.48 g/cm³ | 0.162 lb/in³ |
Tube Dimensions and Calculated Section Properties (CWSR):
| Size (US) | Size (Metric) | OD | ID | Wall (t) | Metal Area | Weight | Moment of Inertia I | Section Modulus Z | Polar Moment J (≈2I) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.5" × 0.035" | 12.7 mm × 0.89 mm | 12.70 mm | 10.92 mm | 0.89 mm | 34.4 mm² | 0.238 kg/m | 1.54 × 10⁶ mm⁴ | 0.121 × 10⁶ mm³ | 3.08 × 10⁶ mm⁴ |
| 0.500 in | 0.430 in | 0.035 in | 0.0533 in² | 0.160 lb/ft | 0.00370 in⁴ | 0.00740 in³ | 0.00740 in⁴ | ||
| 0.75" × 0.052" | 19.05 mm × 1.32 mm | 19.05 mm | 16.41 mm | 1.32 mm | 76.8 mm² | 0.531 kg/m | 5.16 × 10⁶ mm⁴ | 0.406 × 10⁶ mm³ | 10.3 × 10⁶ mm⁴ |
| 0.750 in | 0.646 in | 0.052 in | 0.119 in² | 0.357 lb/ft | 0.0124 in⁴ | 0.0248 in³ | 0.0248 in⁴ | ||
| 1.0" × 0.065" | 25.4 mm × 1.65 mm | 25.40 mm | 22.10 mm | 1.65 mm | 127 mm² | 0.879 kg/m | 11.9 × 10⁶ mm⁴ | 0.939 × 10⁶ mm³ | 23.8 × 10⁶ mm⁴ |
| 1.000 in | 0.870 in | 0.065 in | 0.197 in² | 0.591 lb/ft | 0.0286 in⁴ | 0.0573 in³ | 0.0572 in⁴ | ||
| 1.5" × 0.087" | 38.1 mm × 2.21 mm | 38.10 mm | 33.68 mm | 2.21 mm | 257 mm² | 1.78 kg/m | 53.7 × 10⁶ mm⁴ | 2.82 × 10⁶ mm³ | 107 × 10⁶ mm⁴ |
| 1.500 in | 1.326 in | 0.087 in | 0.398 in² | 1.194 lb/ft | 0.129 in⁴ | 0.172 in³ | 0.258 in⁴ |
Recommended Mandrel Bend Radii (Centerline Radius – CLR) for CWSR Grade 9 Titanium
(Cold bending with proper mandrel and wiper die; boost recommended on larger sizes)
| Tube OD | Tightest Practical CLR (experienced shop, low ovality <5%) | Recommended Production CLR (safe, <3% ovality, <1% thinning) | Absolute Minimum CLR (risk of wrinkling/cracking) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 12.7 mm (0.5") | 25 mm (1.0") → ~2.0 × OD | 38 mm (1.5") | 19 mm (not advised in CWSR) |
| 19.05 mm (0.75") | 44 mm (1.75") → ~2.3 × OD | 57 – 64 mm (2.25 – 2.5") | 38 mm |
| 25.4 mm (1.0") | 63 mm (2.5") → ~2.5 × OD | 76 – 89 mm (3.0 – 3.5") | 51 mm |
| 38.1 mm (1.5") | 114 mm (4.5") → ~3.0 × OD | 152 mm (6.0") | 95 mm |
Rule of thumb for CWSR Grade 9:
- Minimum CLR ≈ 2.5 – 3.0 × OD for reliable production bends
- 3–4 × OD is very safe and common in high-end bicycle frames
- Tighter than 2× OD in CWSR usually requires hot bending or annealed material
Maximum Allowable Bending Stress (approximate, no safety factor)
Using typical CWSR yield 800 MPa / 116 ksi: M_max = Z × σ_y → allowable bending moment before yielding
| Tube Size | Allowable Moment (yield) |
|---|---|
| 0.5" × 0.035" | ~97 N·m (860 lb·in) |
| 0.75" × 0.052" | ~325 N·m (2,880 lb·in) |
| 1.0" × 0.065" | ~751 N·m (6,650 lb·in) |
| 1.5" × 0.087" | ~2,260 N·m (20,000 lb·in) |
This data package is what most high-end frame builders and aerospace shops use when working with these exact Grade 9 CWSR tube sets.
Key Differences Between Annealed and CWSR Ti-3Al-2.5V (Grade 9) Tubing:
| Property / Characteristic | Annealed (fully recrystallized) | CWSR (Cold-Worked Stress-Relieved) | Practical Impact for Frame Building / Fabrication |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ultimate Tensile Strength (UTS) | 620–800 MPa (90–116 ksi) | 860–965 MPa (125–140 ksi) | CWSR is ~30–40 % stronger |
| 0.2 % Yield Strength | 480–650 MPa (70–94 ksi) | 725–860 MPa (105–125 ksi) | CWSR has ~50–70 % higher yield → stiffer, dent-resistant frames |
| Elongation (ductility) | 15–20 % | 10–15 % | Annealed is noticeably more forgiving when bending |
| Minimum bend radius (typical safe) | 1.5–2.0 × OD (very tight bends possible) | 2.5–3.5 × OD (3–4 × OD recommended for production) | Annealed allows much tighter bends without cracking or excessive ovality |
| Spring-back during bending | Moderate | High (10–20 % more than annealed) | CWSR requires more over-bend compensation on the bender |
| Ovality & wall thinning tolerance | Can tolerate 8–10 % ovality and more thinning | Must keep <3–5 % ovality and <8 % thinning or risk cracking | CWSR needs better tooling (mandrel, wiper, boost) |
| Fatigue strength | Good (~350–450 MPa) | Excellent (~450–550 MPa) | CWSR is preferred for high-stress bicycle and aerospace applications |
| Weldability | Excellent | Very good, but slightly narrower parameter window | Both weld well; CWSR just needs a touch more care |
| Post-bend heat treatment possible? | Usually not needed | Can be locally annealed after very tight bends if required | Rarely done, but possible on CWSR to recover ductility in bent areas |
| Typical applications | Custom one-off frames, very complex geometries | Vast majority of high-end production Ti frames (Seven, Moots, Litespeed, Firefly, etc.) | CWSR is the “standard” for modern Ti frames because the strength advantage outweighs the slightly harder bending |
| Cost | Usually same tube price, but more labor to bend | Same tube price | Fabricating CWSR takes longer → higher shop labor cost |
Quick Decision Guide for a Fabricator:
| Want → | Choose |
|---|---|
| Absolute tightest bends, complex shapes, one-off art bikes | Annealed |
| Maximum strength & stiffness, best fatigue life, production-friendly geometries | CWSR (this is what 95 % of high-end Ti frames use today) |
| Somewhere in between | Some builders buy CWSR and locally anneal only the tight bends (advanced technique) |
CWSR is the go-to for almost all modern titanium bicycle frames because the strength and fatigue benefits far outweigh the slightly larger bend radii required. Annealed is reserved for builders who need to hit extremely tight radii that CWSR simply won’t allow without cracking.
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