mchidester
Industrial
- Apr 6, 2017
- 7
Hello All,
I work for a manufacturing company and we are currently looking at the feasibility to bringing out heat treat processes in house to reduce cost and lead time for the parts. We have an oven that use for a different purpose and I have done some testing in that oven with mixed results. Below are the particulars
Material: Either ASTM A747 TYPE CB7Cu-1 SOLUTION ANNEALED OR ASTM A564 UNS S17400 TYPE 630 SOLUTION ANNEALED
Part Usage: Compressor valve bumpers
Size: 4 different sizes ranging from .75" x 1.5" to .65" x 3"
With the current testing I have done, the I have been successful in reaching hardness criteria (40 to 47 Rc) on the smaller parts, but on the larger parts, I have only had 1 of 10 come out within spec. On the other 9, there was no change in hardness, with it staying at 32-34 Rc as it tested prior to the heat treat cycle. As far as process, I have been heating the oven to 900 degrees, then putting the parts in, waiting of the oven to re-stabilize at 900 and then starting the clock for 1 hour. After an hour, pulling the parts out and letting them cool on a metal grate table.
From everything I have read on here, I made an assumption that the larger parts were taking too long to reach 900 and therefore not staying at 900 for an hour, so on my last test, I left the parts in for 2 hours at 900, but got the same result of no hardness change. I will caveat this with the fact that the oven we currently have does not circulate air and is also old and worn out so there is not uniform heat distribution throughout. However, I am putting all of the parts at the same spot in the oven to try and control that variable as much as possible in the testing. We are planning to buy a new oven, but I am trying to validate that we are not missing something before making that purchase.
What am I missing?
Thanks in advance for the help.
I work for a manufacturing company and we are currently looking at the feasibility to bringing out heat treat processes in house to reduce cost and lead time for the parts. We have an oven that use for a different purpose and I have done some testing in that oven with mixed results. Below are the particulars
Material: Either ASTM A747 TYPE CB7Cu-1 SOLUTION ANNEALED OR ASTM A564 UNS S17400 TYPE 630 SOLUTION ANNEALED
Part Usage: Compressor valve bumpers
Size: 4 different sizes ranging from .75" x 1.5" to .65" x 3"
With the current testing I have done, the I have been successful in reaching hardness criteria (40 to 47 Rc) on the smaller parts, but on the larger parts, I have only had 1 of 10 come out within spec. On the other 9, there was no change in hardness, with it staying at 32-34 Rc as it tested prior to the heat treat cycle. As far as process, I have been heating the oven to 900 degrees, then putting the parts in, waiting of the oven to re-stabilize at 900 and then starting the clock for 1 hour. After an hour, pulling the parts out and letting them cool on a metal grate table.
From everything I have read on here, I made an assumption that the larger parts were taking too long to reach 900 and therefore not staying at 900 for an hour, so on my last test, I left the parts in for 2 hours at 900, but got the same result of no hardness change. I will caveat this with the fact that the oven we currently have does not circulate air and is also old and worn out so there is not uniform heat distribution throughout. However, I am putting all of the parts at the same spot in the oven to try and control that variable as much as possible in the testing. We are planning to buy a new oven, but I am trying to validate that we are not missing something before making that purchase.
What am I missing?
Thanks in advance for the help.