Lyrl
Materials
- Jan 29, 2015
- 67
I work at a commercial heat treater that mainly does carburizing. We're working with a potential customer on carburizing some ~3" ID / 5" OD parts made of X4CrNiMo 16-5-1.
They tried nitriding these parts (at another company - the place I work doesn't have any nitriding equipment) to a depth of .004": 68 HRC at .002" and .004", dropping to 36 HRC at .008" and to the core hardness of 33 HRC at .012". The nitrided parts were pressure tested: pipes filled with water and pressurized to 25,000 pounds (per square inch?). The result was pitting at the corners of the bearing races (picture attached). They think the cause of the pitting is the case depth being too shallow (their reasoning for sending samples to us for carburizing). Does that sound plausible? Or could it be some other factor (the extreme hardness of the nitrided case causing brittleness, maybe?)
They tried nitriding these parts (at another company - the place I work doesn't have any nitriding equipment) to a depth of .004": 68 HRC at .002" and .004", dropping to 36 HRC at .008" and to the core hardness of 33 HRC at .012". The nitrided parts were pressure tested: pipes filled with water and pressurized to 25,000 pounds (per square inch?). The result was pitting at the corners of the bearing races (picture attached). They think the cause of the pitting is the case depth being too shallow (their reasoning for sending samples to us for carburizing). Does that sound plausible? Or could it be some other factor (the extreme hardness of the nitrided case causing brittleness, maybe?)