rollingcloud
Aerospace
- Aug 9, 2022
- 174
Is it a good idea to remove the heat treat process control on the flex shaft core? The new vendor has a heat treat process that is a trade secret and is asking us to remove the standard heat treat process. I proposed specifying a hardness range after removing the heat treat control, but they argued that having hardness control on a flex shaft core (which is made of a bunch of stainless-steel wires) is not an industry standard. Currently, it has a heat treat process control per AMS 2759/3 with a minimum hardness and the following mechanical requirements:
THE TORSIONAL LOAD AND DEFLECTION CRITERIA AT A 7.5 MINIMUM RADIUS ARE AS FOLLOWS:
AVERAGE OPERATING: 11 IN-LBS.
MAXIMUM OPERATING: 25 IN-LBS.
TRANSIENT MAXIMUM: 90 IN-LBS.
TORSIONAL BREAK LOAD: 240 IN-LBS. (IN STRAIGHT CONDITION)
I am thinking maybe it should have a max hardness at very least if we are removing the heat treat process to ensure it's not too hard/brittle? Which would meet the torsional load and deflection requirement but might have premature failure.
THE TORSIONAL LOAD AND DEFLECTION CRITERIA AT A 7.5 MINIMUM RADIUS ARE AS FOLLOWS:
AVERAGE OPERATING: 11 IN-LBS.
MAXIMUM OPERATING: 25 IN-LBS.
TRANSIENT MAXIMUM: 90 IN-LBS.
TORSIONAL BREAK LOAD: 240 IN-LBS. (IN STRAIGHT CONDITION)
I am thinking maybe it should have a max hardness at very least if we are removing the heat treat process to ensure it's not too hard/brittle? Which would meet the torsional load and deflection requirement but might have premature failure.