I have to concur that the only way to verify if peening will help welded N-60 is to try it.
Looking back through my notes and papers I found several references to discussions with Armco concerning the welding of wrought sleeves in place with 308L which resulted in the HAZ of the N-60 being a lot more susceptible to scaring if it touched off on startup. At the time it appears that this was an effect we had to live with and but was later eliminated by under sizing the ends of the sleeves by a couple of thousandths on the ends.
One of the things I had made a note to do was investigate these scars a little more. I made a note that the origin of the scars were anomalies in the wrought N-60, no mention as to what they were. Never got back to doing this as
N-60/17/4 (nitrided) started working so well for us.
I still think trying to peen welded N-60 would be a very interesting experiment. When I first started shootpeening every thing except what was the usual applications, I could get no help or encouragement, so everything was an experiment. I worked on surfaces, especially where the grain boundries were in play and achieved some very good results along with a few losers. In the process I used everything from a Wheelabator or Pangborn Slinger to a cleaning drum with chilled iron stars.
meteng,
I have essentially the same statements by Armco in several pieces of N-60 literature, but I would suspect that most of the references were to cold working in respect to forming. I can’t see getting the same surface modification intensity with normal cold work as you would by peening.
Wish I still had access to the my old lab as I would certainly have go at it.