Ewan FI
Mechanical
- Oct 1, 2020
- 6
We manufacture a Measuring Axle from 17-4 PH. We buy in the material in Annealed state and machine this in house to the form we require which approximates to a 350mm long x 35mm dia "dog bone" shape with the center being machined to a 15mm square cross section. We leave a couple of diameters slightly large for post heat treatment machining.
We then sub contract the heat treatment to condition H900 and we are finding the Axles are bent when they are returned and hopefully someone on here can help me find out why.
Our process-
1. We measure (on a center) and record dimensions before we ship the Axles so we know they are good when the are dispatched
2. The sub contractor then anneals the Axles (not sure if this is necessary and I suspect that this is where the problem could be). They say this is necessary to achieve the hardness?
3. The sub contractor heat treats to 900 deg F with the axles vertical for 1 hr and then allows to cool in still air
4. We receive the Axles back and check the dimensions - the last batch had a 1mm runout!
From my reading up on 17-4 HP I can find that 900 deg F would not cause any deformation of the part (other than the acceptable growth which we allow for). Would the annealing temperature cause deformation? Would the annealing relieve stresses built up during machining and this is what I am seeing?
Any advice appreciated.
Ewan
We then sub contract the heat treatment to condition H900 and we are finding the Axles are bent when they are returned and hopefully someone on here can help me find out why.
Our process-
1. We measure (on a center) and record dimensions before we ship the Axles so we know they are good when the are dispatched
2. The sub contractor then anneals the Axles (not sure if this is necessary and I suspect that this is where the problem could be). They say this is necessary to achieve the hardness?
3. The sub contractor heat treats to 900 deg F with the axles vertical for 1 hr and then allows to cool in still air
4. We receive the Axles back and check the dimensions - the last batch had a 1mm runout!
From my reading up on 17-4 HP I can find that 900 deg F would not cause any deformation of the part (other than the acceptable growth which we allow for). Would the annealing temperature cause deformation? Would the annealing relieve stresses built up during machining and this is what I am seeing?
Any advice appreciated.
Ewan