PressEquip
Civil/Environmental
- Oct 26, 2009
- 35
Hello,
For certain field jobs the machine shop makes custom attachments for the pneumatic hammer. They've been doing this for a long time (we've started to formalize the process). Most of the time it works out well but this year the field job was really tough and lots of these attachments broke (see attached photo).
The tool puts the attachment in cyclic impact compression (major load), with some minor shear and moment loads. The skin of the part is carburized to create a hard surface (prevent the surfaces from mushrooming (plastic deformation)) and the core is still ductile.
The attachment is fabricated with gentle radius at transitions in OD to try and minimize any notch effects.
Material AISI 8620 Hot Rolled, Carburized Heat Treatment for ~0.05"+ case depth complete with temper to achieve surface hardness of 50-55 HRC
Preliminary Failure Analysis: During the heat treating process (carburizing, oil quench, temper), the skin of the part transforms into martensite and some micro-cracks occur. During use in the pneumatic hammer the cracks propagated and eventually the part failed in brittle fracture (see photo).
Some Suggestions People Have already Provided
1) Polish the surface in the area where the failure occurred before heat treating (Failed punchs had surface marks left from machining. You can feel slight ridges if you drag your nail along the punch.)
2) Shot Peen the area to put the surface in compressive stress state (helps to prevent the formation and propigation of cracks because the tensile force must over come the residual compressive stress).
3) Mask this area before carburizing to help reduce the hardness
4) Change the heat treatment so attachments skin is not so hard
If you have any helpful thoughts or insight, please reply to this thread
Thanks
A Fan of EngTips, share the knowledge
For certain field jobs the machine shop makes custom attachments for the pneumatic hammer. They've been doing this for a long time (we've started to formalize the process). Most of the time it works out well but this year the field job was really tough and lots of these attachments broke (see attached photo).
The tool puts the attachment in cyclic impact compression (major load), with some minor shear and moment loads. The skin of the part is carburized to create a hard surface (prevent the surfaces from mushrooming (plastic deformation)) and the core is still ductile.
The attachment is fabricated with gentle radius at transitions in OD to try and minimize any notch effects.
Material AISI 8620 Hot Rolled, Carburized Heat Treatment for ~0.05"+ case depth complete with temper to achieve surface hardness of 50-55 HRC
Preliminary Failure Analysis: During the heat treating process (carburizing, oil quench, temper), the skin of the part transforms into martensite and some micro-cracks occur. During use in the pneumatic hammer the cracks propagated and eventually the part failed in brittle fracture (see photo).
Some Suggestions People Have already Provided
1) Polish the surface in the area where the failure occurred before heat treating (Failed punchs had surface marks left from machining. You can feel slight ridges if you drag your nail along the punch.)
2) Shot Peen the area to put the surface in compressive stress state (helps to prevent the formation and propigation of cracks because the tensile force must over come the residual compressive stress).
3) Mask this area before carburizing to help reduce the hardness
4) Change the heat treatment so attachments skin is not so hard
If you have any helpful thoughts or insight, please reply to this thread
Thanks
A Fan of EngTips, share the knowledge