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1
- #1
sodeen
Materials
- Jan 20, 2011
- 15
So I work for a small bearing company that recently (~6 months ago) got an induction hardener to through harden stainless steel bearing races. Predictably, the faster production rate has the production manager trying to cram anything and everything that they can run into this machine. (The machine also uses a cone-die and polymer quenchant to preserve roundness during cooling.)
One of the parts in question is showing quite a bit of growth and movement while being machined post-induction harden. Because dimensional tolerance is so important in these parts, this is a bad sign.
The point of all that background info was to ask this:
Am I right in assuming that parts that are induction thru-hardened are likely to have more residual stress than their counterparts that are run in a regular old controlled-atmosphere furnace?
The stories that I'm getting indicate that the problems started about the time these parts were no longer being run in the furnace. I have a feeling that the growth is due to these residual stresses in the part, and that the induction hardener is playing a big part in introducing those stresses into the material.
(it is tempered twice post-austenitization before any machining takes place.)
Any thoughts?
One of the parts in question is showing quite a bit of growth and movement while being machined post-induction harden. Because dimensional tolerance is so important in these parts, this is a bad sign.
The point of all that background info was to ask this:
Am I right in assuming that parts that are induction thru-hardened are likely to have more residual stress than their counterparts that are run in a regular old controlled-atmosphere furnace?
The stories that I'm getting indicate that the problems started about the time these parts were no longer being run in the furnace. I have a feeling that the growth is due to these residual stresses in the part, and that the induction hardener is playing a big part in introducing those stresses into the material.
(it is tempered twice post-austenitization before any machining takes place.)
Any thoughts?