JerryRoy
Specifier/Regulator
- May 3, 2014
- 13
Howdy Ed,
I was researching the process for anealing 1018, and came upon your post of 25 Sept 09.
25 Sep 09 8:43
If this is a DC application who would care about the perm?
Saturation is all that matters.
Any low carbon steel grade with less than 0.2%C that has been annealed at 1400-1475F with a slow cool should give very nice high saturation levels.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
I was heating two 1018 pole pieces in the propane furnace, and got distracted, which allowed the temperature to exceed 1475 F.
By most color charts, and my thermocouple, I was in the 1750 F range.
I took the pieces out and buried them in Perlite, and am letting them cool.
The question is, will cooling from a higher temperature decrease the saturation density properties, (make it lower), and if so, how to recover from my faux pas.
Thank you for sharing your knowledge.
Jerry Roy
I was researching the process for anealing 1018, and came upon your post of 25 Sept 09.
25 Sep 09 8:43
If this is a DC application who would care about the perm?
Saturation is all that matters.
Any low carbon steel grade with less than 0.2%C that has been annealed at 1400-1475F with a slow cool should give very nice high saturation levels.
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
I was heating two 1018 pole pieces in the propane furnace, and got distracted, which allowed the temperature to exceed 1475 F.
By most color charts, and my thermocouple, I was in the 1750 F range.
I took the pieces out and buried them in Perlite, and am letting them cool.
The question is, will cooling from a higher temperature decrease the saturation density properties, (make it lower), and if so, how to recover from my faux pas.
Thank you for sharing your knowledge.
Jerry Roy