jspake
Mechanical
- Jan 18, 2012
- 3
hi guys, i am new to these forums, so please bear with me. i am NOT an engineer, i am a metalsmith. i have a question about some of my procedures, and i was hoping someone could let me know if i am behaving foolishly, and if so, how? i'll try to make it as straightforward as i can.
i am brazing (silver soldering) machined 01 tool steel parts together, and/or tool steel parts to 302/316 stainless parts. the solder i have is harris safety silv 56, with a melting point around 1200°, and i use lots of the stay silv black paste flux while soldering. a typical situation would be soldering a 1/4" 302 stainless ball with a 1/8" hole drilled into it to a depth of 5/32 onto the end of a length of 01 drill rod (1/8" diameter rod at lets say 2 inches long). i do this by filling the hole in the ball with flux, applying a few bits of solder to the hole, placing the ball onto the end of the rod, which is secured to a vise, or some sort of rigging. i cover the entire ball and top of the rod with flux as well. while keeping pressure on the ball (steam buildup) i will heat the ball/rod to the soldering temperature and solder the two parts together. i make sure not to overheat the ball, and the copious amount of flux keeps the parts fairly clean.
here is the question: have i made the rod brittle just by heating it to 1200°, and should i now allow the hot metal assembly to cool to room temperature slowly (on a hunk of metal) or is it safe to quench the assembly in water to speed up my workflow? frankly i have done both, but i don't know enough about the reality of what is actually happening to the internal structure to know which way will give me a stronger part. in use, these parts are put under a great deal of stress, so obviously strength is the goal. i would rather the rod bend than snap. i have done some totally unscientific "testing" but the results have been... well, useless.
thanks for taking the time to read this. just by looking at the thread titles i can tell that i am already way out of my league. i appreciate anyone who would take the time to set me straight. thanks!
-jeremy
i am brazing (silver soldering) machined 01 tool steel parts together, and/or tool steel parts to 302/316 stainless parts. the solder i have is harris safety silv 56, with a melting point around 1200°, and i use lots of the stay silv black paste flux while soldering. a typical situation would be soldering a 1/4" 302 stainless ball with a 1/8" hole drilled into it to a depth of 5/32 onto the end of a length of 01 drill rod (1/8" diameter rod at lets say 2 inches long). i do this by filling the hole in the ball with flux, applying a few bits of solder to the hole, placing the ball onto the end of the rod, which is secured to a vise, or some sort of rigging. i cover the entire ball and top of the rod with flux as well. while keeping pressure on the ball (steam buildup) i will heat the ball/rod to the soldering temperature and solder the two parts together. i make sure not to overheat the ball, and the copious amount of flux keeps the parts fairly clean.
here is the question: have i made the rod brittle just by heating it to 1200°, and should i now allow the hot metal assembly to cool to room temperature slowly (on a hunk of metal) or is it safe to quench the assembly in water to speed up my workflow? frankly i have done both, but i don't know enough about the reality of what is actually happening to the internal structure to know which way will give me a stronger part. in use, these parts are put under a great deal of stress, so obviously strength is the goal. i would rather the rod bend than snap. i have done some totally unscientific "testing" but the results have been... well, useless.
thanks for taking the time to read this. just by looking at the thread titles i can tell that i am already way out of my league. i appreciate anyone who would take the time to set me straight. thanks!
-jeremy