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Dimension vs. Heat Treat 2

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RSimano

Industrial
Mar 31, 2011
5
I have a question in regards to Heat Treatment of metals vs. Dimensional characteristics.

Ex. Carbon Steel ASTM A-1011 TY B

.125 +/-.005 THK x 2" +/-.005 Outside Dia.

Under standard heat treatment practices for hardeneing of metals. Will the dimensional characteristics of the parent material alter enough to be a cause of concern for the finished part after it has normalized from heat treatment?
 
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Hot-rolled carbon steel according to ASTM A1011 cannot be hardened by thermal processing. Do you know the exact process for "hardening", i.e. time, temperature, etc.
 
Will the dimensional characteristics of the parent material alter enough to be a cause of concern for the finished part after it has normalized from heat treatment?
The answer is most certianly. You can keep dimensional changes to a minimum by several methods, but a normalizing treatment has the possibility of resulting in more than 0.005" distoriton in 2".

rp
 
"Hot-rolled carbon steel according to ASTM A1011 cannot be hardened by thermal processing."

At least not by thermal processing alone, i.e. you would need a carburizing or carbo-nitriding step.
 
I spoke with the machineist and he corrected me the type steel is type A2. 1850 degrees for 2 hours.
 
While A2 tool steel is an air-hardening grade, meaning that it does not require quenching in water or oil to transform the microstructure to martensite, +/-.005 is too tight a tolerance to expect after heating to 1850 F followed by air cooling.
 
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