SwaggingIt
Mechanical
- Oct 31, 2014
- 22
Hi. Havent posted on here since college...
I'm working with a lot of stainless steels and our material callout on drawings include "... HEAT TREAT PER AMS-H-6875..." in addition to calling out the H condition using the AMS standard for that specific material such as AMS 5659 for 15-5PH. For example, an entire callout for 15-5PH is “15-5PH PER AMS 5659. HEAT TREAT PER AMS-H-6875, CLASS D, COND. H1025”.
My questions is that isn't calling out AMS-H-6875 redundant because we already state the H condition we want the material to be? And the AMS specific standard, such as AMS 5659, states the hardness, strength, and quality assurance requirements so theres really not much calling out AMS-H-6875 is doing for us except maybe handcuffing us to that specific standard.
But I'd love to hear from any material experts on whether or not we should keep that heat treat callout on our drawings. Thank you!
- Luke
I'm working with a lot of stainless steels and our material callout on drawings include "... HEAT TREAT PER AMS-H-6875..." in addition to calling out the H condition using the AMS standard for that specific material such as AMS 5659 for 15-5PH. For example, an entire callout for 15-5PH is “15-5PH PER AMS 5659. HEAT TREAT PER AMS-H-6875, CLASS D, COND. H1025”.
My questions is that isn't calling out AMS-H-6875 redundant because we already state the H condition we want the material to be? And the AMS specific standard, such as AMS 5659, states the hardness, strength, and quality assurance requirements so theres really not much calling out AMS-H-6875 is doing for us except maybe handcuffing us to that specific standard.
But I'd love to hear from any material experts on whether or not we should keep that heat treat callout on our drawings. Thank you!
- Luke