cbrf23
Mechanical
- Oct 11, 2011
- 87
Hello,
I'm having trouble specifying non-destructive examination for inspecting castings (which are used to manufacture high-pressure hydraulic cylinders) prior to machining.
I have a casting that has four cylinders machined into it - cylinder is about 2" in diameter by 4.5" deep, and each houses a piston that is hydraulically powered at normal operating pressures up to 10,000psi. During prototyping, we had a problem with a handful of castings leaking out through the wall of the cylinder (creating a very effective oil mister). All of these castings were inspected 100% via xray and also visually inspected - no porosity was detected in any of these tests, and the castings did hold pressure up to around 5,000 psi or so, so the porosity is microscopic enough that the castings would hold fairly significant pressure, just not enough.
Right now, my testing consists of hydrostatic testing of finished machined products - we pressurize to working pressure with the normal hydraulic fluid used and hold for a period of time.
Our casting manufacturer wants some specification to work to that they can test the castings prior to machining, but I'm not sure what (if any) inspection method would accurately predict the servicability of the castings after machining.
I don't know of a good way to seal a cast (unmachined) surface that would allow us to test at 10,000psi, and I'm not familiar enough with this type of testing to know if there is a lower pressure alternative. We did hook up a pneumatic line from shop (≈100 psi) but at this pressure we were unable to detect leaks even in castings which were known leakers (identified via high-pressure hydrostatic tests).
Any advice on possible testing methods or standards would be very welcome! I'm sorry I can't share pictures or drawings.
I'm having trouble specifying non-destructive examination for inspecting castings (which are used to manufacture high-pressure hydraulic cylinders) prior to machining.
I have a casting that has four cylinders machined into it - cylinder is about 2" in diameter by 4.5" deep, and each houses a piston that is hydraulically powered at normal operating pressures up to 10,000psi. During prototyping, we had a problem with a handful of castings leaking out through the wall of the cylinder (creating a very effective oil mister). All of these castings were inspected 100% via xray and also visually inspected - no porosity was detected in any of these tests, and the castings did hold pressure up to around 5,000 psi or so, so the porosity is microscopic enough that the castings would hold fairly significant pressure, just not enough.
Right now, my testing consists of hydrostatic testing of finished machined products - we pressurize to working pressure with the normal hydraulic fluid used and hold for a period of time.
Our casting manufacturer wants some specification to work to that they can test the castings prior to machining, but I'm not sure what (if any) inspection method would accurately predict the servicability of the castings after machining.
I don't know of a good way to seal a cast (unmachined) surface that would allow us to test at 10,000psi, and I'm not familiar enough with this type of testing to know if there is a lower pressure alternative. We did hook up a pneumatic line from shop (≈100 psi) but at this pressure we were unable to detect leaks even in castings which were known leakers (identified via high-pressure hydrostatic tests).
Any advice on possible testing methods or standards would be very welcome! I'm sorry I can't share pictures or drawings.