Zeyneb
Automotive
- Jan 12, 2024
- 12
I need to determine if a unknown steel sample has received a heat treatment or not. So I'm advised by someone on another forum to have a laboratory perform an chemical composition analysis. I do think an Optical Emission Spectrometer (OES) analysis would be the most suitable because it is important to have the carbon content as well. Still it does not tell anything about the hardness and relating to that the tensile strength. So I assume I do need to add a hardness test also. Rockwell maybe.
What I'm wondering about is if the material composition and the hardness will tell me everything I need to know to purchase the right steel and possibly do a heat treatment on it.
Could it be for example that the part has gone a sloppy quenching process without tempering and still reach the same hardness as a part with proper quenching and tempering. So the mechanical properties of the parts would differ?
What I'm wondering about is if the material composition and the hardness will tell me everything I need to know to purchase the right steel and possibly do a heat treatment on it.
Could it be for example that the part has gone a sloppy quenching process without tempering and still reach the same hardness as a part with proper quenching and tempering. So the mechanical properties of the parts would differ?