swimmingskibble
Mechanical
I recently ran into an issue where some parts were rejected for not having the heat treat certs for a part that should have been annealed. The source of the confusion is a drawing note that states "ANNEAL AFTER COLD WORKING." After talking with multiple engineers and machine shops, I've discovered that there are two view points on this. The first point of view is that cold working is the plastic deformation of a material (bending, drawing, extruding, shot peening, etc...) and since machining is only removing material, it is not considered cold working. The other point of view is that machining is considered cold working because of the micro plastic deformations that occur along the surfaces where the chip formation occurs.
Personally I think it was just a bad callout that needed to be revised, so that there is no room for interpretation. But I am curious if there is some type of an official stance that machining is considered cold working or not. So far I haven't been able to find an official ASTM or AISI spec that states one way or the other.
Personally I think it was just a bad callout that needed to be revised, so that there is no room for interpretation. But I am curious if there is some type of an official stance that machining is considered cold working or not. So far I haven't been able to find an official ASTM or AISI spec that states one way or the other.