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1
- #1
metalman8357
Materials
- Oct 5, 2012
- 155
Hi all,
I've recieved a couple small (.25" diameter) mandrels from production and I've been asked to look at the root cause for failure. The mandrels are broken in half, and I want to analyze the fracture surface to determine the failure mechanism. I'm wondering what the best way to go about this is? I have mounting capability, micro hardness, macro hardness, an inverted and a stereo microscope. I've only been working for a few months as a materials engineer out of college, and I would appreciate some guidance on this project (I work for a small company, no one else has a metallurgy background). I know that if the failure is fatigue, I should be able to see some beach marks, but I wouldnt know the best way to setup and visualize this. Any suggestions would be extremely helpful. Thanks again!
I've recieved a couple small (.25" diameter) mandrels from production and I've been asked to look at the root cause for failure. The mandrels are broken in half, and I want to analyze the fracture surface to determine the failure mechanism. I'm wondering what the best way to go about this is? I have mounting capability, micro hardness, macro hardness, an inverted and a stereo microscope. I've only been working for a few months as a materials engineer out of college, and I would appreciate some guidance on this project (I work for a small company, no one else has a metallurgy background). I know that if the failure is fatigue, I should be able to see some beach marks, but I wouldnt know the best way to setup and visualize this. Any suggestions would be extremely helpful. Thanks again!