Typically, most aircraft structure for that time period was of the 24 series. The alloy numbering system has modified that to what we now know as 2024. Also, heat treat numbering has also changed significantly. O, 1/4H, 1/2H, ect. have been converted to a T series numbering system. By decoding the numbering, you can determine the heat treat process that was used. Most sheet goods, used in the construction of aircraft are T3 heat treat. Form something that cannot be formed in in the T3 condition, it will be formed in the T0 condition and then heat treated to what is now known as the T4 condition. T3 material can be annealed, worked then allowed to age back to it's treated condition, but it will not be T3, but T42, and have nearly the same strength numbers. There is lots of info published on working 2024, and one should be fairly familiar with the information and practice some before jumping in on a part for flight.
There are other alloys used in the production of parts too, but they can vary and are tailored to forgings, castings and other fabrication methods, and will be specified by the individual part number drawing.
Material thickness is going to be specified by the design of the part. I've worked parts from material as thin as .016", to blanks from 8" custom rolled plate stock. The designer is going to use whatever thickness he needs to meet the design criteria and fatigue life. Often, thou, for manufacturing convenience, they may step up a thickness to preclude having to have special mill runs of materials. I.e. if the design criteria can be met with .014" sheet goods, .016" would be used since it's a standard thickness.
Post WW2, 2024, 6061 and 7075 have all been used in aircraft construction in significant quantities. Again, the designer will specify the alloy based on the design criteria and what alloy will meet it all and at the lightest fabricated weight.
Moving on to steel. As the war broke out, 1025 was the major steel alloy in use. As 4130 became more and more available, designers moved to it, as the increase in strength for thinner shapes helped to decrease the structural weight of the aircraft. Since the late 50's, when Lockheed had a huge part in developing forgable Titanium alloys, Ti has rapidly become more prevalent in aircraft structure as well as engine parts.
If you you are looking to fabricate parts, a couple of things to note. Your best source of information is going to be the individual part drawing for what you want to fabricate. Next best thing will be the SRM, or Structural Repair Manual. The SRM will give you the material usage on the part, or will give you a material applicable for a field repair, if any. Last method is use a competent, experienced structural/design engineer to make the proper determination. When in doubt, don't guess, unless you are going to doing static only parts. From experience, most of us that work on WW2 aircraft know current substitutions or have access to the data, but once you get into aircraft of the jet age, the data is less and less. Get into something that goes transsonic and beyond, it becomes very specialized and extremely critical that you are correct.
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