agpowder
Mechanical
- Jul 30, 2008
- 34
Hello, I own a business that makes a plastic product and we are using self designed and made extruding machines.
As part of our "machine design improvement" process we have come around to improve the quality of steel used, by heat treating and I am now coming across terms I only very slightly understand, however as I am paying for these processes I would like to just have a little more understanding or confirmation than I presently have, in particular four terms keep coming up from the engineers that I have, these words are (and my simple definition is):
Normalizing: bring the metal into a condition where it can be worked. Word interchangable with Annealing. done by heating to a glow and left to slowly cool.
Quenched: putting the part into water or oil to cool rapidly. word interchangable with Chucked.
Tempered: Heating a part to a temp around 400 to 600 degF and left there for a period of time and then quenched (or chucked) into oil or water. Temp and time is dependant on the desired hardness/tensile strength.
Hardness and tensile strength and yield strength are pretty much directly proportional to each other.
I am not wanting anyone to define further but to tell me I am pretty much right or wrong.
As part of our "machine design improvement" process we have come around to improve the quality of steel used, by heat treating and I am now coming across terms I only very slightly understand, however as I am paying for these processes I would like to just have a little more understanding or confirmation than I presently have, in particular four terms keep coming up from the engineers that I have, these words are (and my simple definition is):
Normalizing: bring the metal into a condition where it can be worked. Word interchangable with Annealing. done by heating to a glow and left to slowly cool.
Quenched: putting the part into water or oil to cool rapidly. word interchangable with Chucked.
Tempered: Heating a part to a temp around 400 to 600 degF and left there for a period of time and then quenched (or chucked) into oil or water. Temp and time is dependant on the desired hardness/tensile strength.
Hardness and tensile strength and yield strength are pretty much directly proportional to each other.
I am not wanting anyone to define further but to tell me I am pretty much right or wrong.