Sparky4598
Mechanical
- May 4, 2024
- 16
We are using some field used parts as an adapter for a test part. Some parts were sent out to be heat treated to a higher hardness and some are being used as is.
My question is does the heat treatment process in any way reset or undo any fatigue damage that may have been done to the part? Say the part has 100,000 cycles on it at some stress above the endurance limit, does the process of bringing the part up to temperature during heat treatment sort of reverse the cycle count? Maybe not to zero, but bring the effective cycle count back down to like 1000 or something?
The material is very similar to AISI 4130 steel. As is part is 23-28HRc and hardened part is 40-45HRc.
Any other info needed just let me know, I'm not super familiar with materials science.
Thanks in advance for any responses!
My question is does the heat treatment process in any way reset or undo any fatigue damage that may have been done to the part? Say the part has 100,000 cycles on it at some stress above the endurance limit, does the process of bringing the part up to temperature during heat treatment sort of reverse the cycle count? Maybe not to zero, but bring the effective cycle count back down to like 1000 or something?
The material is very similar to AISI 4130 steel. As is part is 23-28HRc and hardened part is 40-45HRc.
Any other info needed just let me know, I'm not super familiar with materials science.
Thanks in advance for any responses!