LanaCarrie
Mechanical
- Apr 11, 2003
- 24
I'm analyzing a reamer bit that failed in in a spiral path, with a flat fracture face, in a brittle manner. I cannot identify the manufacturer of the bit (the only markings are HSS Poland) and consequently have no mill certs for the chemistry to check the material against. I sparked the reamer and got the following chemistry:
0.67 C
.27 Si
0.62 Mn
0.21 Cr
0.024 Mo
0.13 Ni
0.029 Al
0.21 Cu
I have not been able to identify the material yet but am thinking this may be a carbon steel similar to 1065 but with Cu additions. However, the HSS marking had me originally thinking I would find the material to be a high speed tool steel. My question is this - I know that Cu can be used for secondary hardening, however, is this typical for tooling? This seems like a strange composition for a bit, but I'm not that familiar with tooling. I've searched the internet and my reference books and have not been able to find any references to the use of copper additions in tool steels. Can anyone offer some insight?
0.67 C
.27 Si
0.62 Mn
0.21 Cr
0.024 Mo
0.13 Ni
0.029 Al
0.21 Cu
I have not been able to identify the material yet but am thinking this may be a carbon steel similar to 1065 but with Cu additions. However, the HSS marking had me originally thinking I would find the material to be a high speed tool steel. My question is this - I know that Cu can be used for secondary hardening, however, is this typical for tooling? This seems like a strange composition for a bit, but I'm not that familiar with tooling. I've searched the internet and my reference books and have not been able to find any references to the use of copper additions in tool steels. Can anyone offer some insight?