foundrydude
Mechanical
- Jun 29, 2009
- 5
As an investment casting house we provide 17-4 investment castings for aerospace applications. A customer source inspector ran into a contradiction that is causing a huge uproar. Statements made have included grounding of aircraft!!! Wonder if anyone else has run across this?
Main question is, does anyone know how to look up the revision history of an AMS spec? AMS-5344 in this case.
Trying to find out when the "cool to below 70°F" requirement was added. The other specs we work to, AMS-2759 and SAE-AMS-H-6875 both call out a cool below 90°F.
Because the blueprint for the casting stated "material per AMS-5344" double solutionize then "heat treat equipment per AMS-H-6875" we interpreted that to the cool below 90°.
Source guy says he sees it otherwise, and we should have cooled below 70.
By the way, for everyone's info, the 6875 spec has been revised not too long ago to further clarify that it is for "raw materials only" and not parts. Parts are defined as something that has both a drawing and a part number. If heat treating "parts" then it refers you to the AMS-2759 family of specs. Which also calls out a cool below 90 for 17-4. A lot of prints call out the 6875, and this is the wrong spec if heat treating "parts."
Also, what does the extra 20 degrees of cooling impart, if anything? We have not seen any difference in hardness or tensile properties, at least nothing significant.
Comments?
Main question is, does anyone know how to look up the revision history of an AMS spec? AMS-5344 in this case.
Trying to find out when the "cool to below 70°F" requirement was added. The other specs we work to, AMS-2759 and SAE-AMS-H-6875 both call out a cool below 90°F.
Because the blueprint for the casting stated "material per AMS-5344" double solutionize then "heat treat equipment per AMS-H-6875" we interpreted that to the cool below 90°.
Source guy says he sees it otherwise, and we should have cooled below 70.
By the way, for everyone's info, the 6875 spec has been revised not too long ago to further clarify that it is for "raw materials only" and not parts. Parts are defined as something that has both a drawing and a part number. If heat treating "parts" then it refers you to the AMS-2759 family of specs. Which also calls out a cool below 90 for 17-4. A lot of prints call out the 6875, and this is the wrong spec if heat treating "parts."
Also, what does the extra 20 degrees of cooling impart, if anything? We have not seen any difference in hardness or tensile properties, at least nothing significant.
Comments?