Scott.C
Mechanical
- Jun 13, 2017
- 4
New to the forum here, looks like an incredible source of knowledge in these groups and glad to meet you all.
We have a small bracket that is failing, and in a cross section I noticed what I would describe as a brittle looking crack in the weld. Upon sectioning more parts, and doing an SEM analysis, we are seeing a very high carbon content in the base metals, which are "supposed" to be 1018. We are seeing carbon in the 3 - 4% range! Presently awaiting material certs from the supplier, if they even have them (we haven't required certs). Any thoughts on why we could see THIS high of a carbon content? Maybe they are using a high carbon steel for some reason? It is a flat 1/8 plate, with a ~1/4 pin welded on the back side of a through hole in the plate.
Thanks for any advice
Scott
We have a small bracket that is failing, and in a cross section I noticed what I would describe as a brittle looking crack in the weld. Upon sectioning more parts, and doing an SEM analysis, we are seeing a very high carbon content in the base metals, which are "supposed" to be 1018. We are seeing carbon in the 3 - 4% range! Presently awaiting material certs from the supplier, if they even have them (we haven't required certs). Any thoughts on why we could see THIS high of a carbon content? Maybe they are using a high carbon steel for some reason? It is a flat 1/8 plate, with a ~1/4 pin welded on the back side of a through hole in the plate.
Thanks for any advice
Scott