colar
Mechanical
- Jun 28, 2001
- 26
Does anybody have an engineering method for actually putting percent elongation numners to use? We all know how the numbers are arrived at, but how can the numbes be used in a mathematical formula to help an engineer in selecting a material?
This stems from a problem we are currently having at our plant. We have recieved some Ductile Iron castings which are unusually hard. They are supposed to be 65-45-12. Our accepted hardness range is 157 to 217 HB for these parts, but we are seing some much higher. The question put to me as the engineer in charge of the product they are used on is "how hard is to hard?" and "so what if their hard, does that mean they will fail?". I can easily draw a line in the sand and say "they are out of spec therfore...", but I would feel more confident if I could say " the corresponding elongation of these castings based on their hardness tells me that they will fail".
Does anyone have some insight on how someone can use percent elongation and ductility to analyse a material?
This stems from a problem we are currently having at our plant. We have recieved some Ductile Iron castings which are unusually hard. They are supposed to be 65-45-12. Our accepted hardness range is 157 to 217 HB for these parts, but we are seing some much higher. The question put to me as the engineer in charge of the product they are used on is "how hard is to hard?" and "so what if their hard, does that mean they will fail?". I can easily draw a line in the sand and say "they are out of spec therfore...", but I would feel more confident if I could say " the corresponding elongation of these castings based on their hardness tells me that they will fail".
Does anyone have some insight on how someone can use percent elongation and ductility to analyse a material?