MechyMarco
Mechanical
- Jun 5, 2014
- 39
Hi all,
Have some parts made from 300M. Been doing standard processing per AMS 6419. Tensile specimens come back with good ductility and yield. Issue is recent brittle failures at low stress levels. Potentially impact loaded, but nothing that's very different from normal use.
I've been playing with temper temperature to dial down hardness in favour of toughness. I'm using my old Aerospace Structural Metals Handbook (1963). Data shows double peak behavior. Optimum at 575F to 600F. Then Valley up to about 1000F where all properties actually get worse.
Still waiting for all data to come in from labs, but my gut says 575F is done for good reasons. Bloody Heat Treaters Guide even says don't temper outside 550F to 600F.
My question relates to the hardness. On large parts tempered at 575 and 600F the surface hardness is about 2-3 HRC higher than smaller 1" rounds I've been playing with. The parts are only about 2" thick max so don't get why such a difference. Leads me to think I should be chasing a hardness spec instead of going with default 575F. Anyone else see 54-55 HRC on parts of 300M tempered at 575F? Maybe I soak at austenitizing temp longer and temper longer. Currently doing 2 hour soak and 2+2 double temper. The 1" rounds and parts are heat treated at the same time. So really confused why the surface hardness would be so different.
Have some parts made from 300M. Been doing standard processing per AMS 6419. Tensile specimens come back with good ductility and yield. Issue is recent brittle failures at low stress levels. Potentially impact loaded, but nothing that's very different from normal use.
I've been playing with temper temperature to dial down hardness in favour of toughness. I'm using my old Aerospace Structural Metals Handbook (1963). Data shows double peak behavior. Optimum at 575F to 600F. Then Valley up to about 1000F where all properties actually get worse.
Still waiting for all data to come in from labs, but my gut says 575F is done for good reasons. Bloody Heat Treaters Guide even says don't temper outside 550F to 600F.
My question relates to the hardness. On large parts tempered at 575 and 600F the surface hardness is about 2-3 HRC higher than smaller 1" rounds I've been playing with. The parts are only about 2" thick max so don't get why such a difference. Leads me to think I should be chasing a hardness spec instead of going with default 575F. Anyone else see 54-55 HRC on parts of 300M tempered at 575F? Maybe I soak at austenitizing temp longer and temper longer. Currently doing 2 hour soak and 2+2 double temper. The 1" rounds and parts are heat treated at the same time. So really confused why the surface hardness would be so different.