metalman8357
Materials
- Oct 5, 2012
- 155
Hey guys,
I've got a quick question about carburizing and I can't seem to find a good answer in my references. I'm running a carburizing process on a custom alloy with similar chemistry to 8620 at 0.95% constant carbon potential and 1700F for 17.3 hours. The part is a rectangular bar measuring 1" x 1" x 4". I've ran 6 runs so far with identical process parameters and so far I'm seeing average effective case depths (depth at 50HRC) vary from 0.065" up to 0.073". For testing, I section the bar in half and run a traverse from all four sides. I'm also seeing a range between the hardness on sides up to 0.010" difference (never seen this before). The process I run is sand blast part, carburize then furnace cool, sand blast, coat with stop-off compound, austenitize at 1550F with endo-gas for 8hr, quench, and blast to remove stop off compound.
1.) One question I have is does the austenitizing process continue to drive carbon into the material even though I am using stop-off compound? Should I be having a better control on the time that these are austenitized in order to have smaller variation between carb runs. For example, if I were to carb and then immediately quench and temper would the depth on this bar be less than if I were to carb, furnace cool, austenitize for 8hr, and then quench and temper?
2.) What could be causing the range of up to 0.010" seen on case depth between two sides of the same block. Usually three of the four sides will be within 0.0005" in depth and one side is an outlier and off by up to 0.010".
3.) I'm using these test rectangular bars to dial in the process for a much larger part (20" in diameter). Is there any reason to believe that the case depths I'm shooting for on these test bars will be different on the larger part?
Any input is GREATLY appreciated. I've been scratching my head over these issues for weeks...
I've got a quick question about carburizing and I can't seem to find a good answer in my references. I'm running a carburizing process on a custom alloy with similar chemistry to 8620 at 0.95% constant carbon potential and 1700F for 17.3 hours. The part is a rectangular bar measuring 1" x 1" x 4". I've ran 6 runs so far with identical process parameters and so far I'm seeing average effective case depths (depth at 50HRC) vary from 0.065" up to 0.073". For testing, I section the bar in half and run a traverse from all four sides. I'm also seeing a range between the hardness on sides up to 0.010" difference (never seen this before). The process I run is sand blast part, carburize then furnace cool, sand blast, coat with stop-off compound, austenitize at 1550F with endo-gas for 8hr, quench, and blast to remove stop off compound.
1.) One question I have is does the austenitizing process continue to drive carbon into the material even though I am using stop-off compound? Should I be having a better control on the time that these are austenitized in order to have smaller variation between carb runs. For example, if I were to carb and then immediately quench and temper would the depth on this bar be less than if I were to carb, furnace cool, austenitize for 8hr, and then quench and temper?
2.) What could be causing the range of up to 0.010" seen on case depth between two sides of the same block. Usually three of the four sides will be within 0.0005" in depth and one side is an outlier and off by up to 0.010".
3.) I'm using these test rectangular bars to dial in the process for a much larger part (20" in diameter). Is there any reason to believe that the case depths I'm shooting for on these test bars will be different on the larger part?
Any input is GREATLY appreciated. I've been scratching my head over these issues for weeks...