tc7
Mechanical
- Mar 17, 2003
- 387
We need to repair a large pillow block on a press which may date back to 1950's era so we don't have any vendor support to identify what the material may be.
Our simple spark test indicates the following:
C = .24
Mn = 1.42
Si = .34
Ni = .091
Cr = .12
Mo = .047
W = .083
V = .065
Al = .012
These ingredients seem to match fairly well to ASTM A516 Gr70 chemistry except for the higher Mn (1.42 v. 1.3 max). I have been told that older machines used high boron levels but my tester cannot detect Boron.
Anyway, my questions are threefold-
1. is there a better guess at what this alloy might be?
2. I am inclined to weld repair with SMAW 9018 rod, minimum preheat (say 150 deg F), no interpass temp restriction ?? (please comment on this) and no PWHT. Welds will be ~3/4" groove w 1/4" fillet reinforcement. Codes do not apply to this repair.
3. not sure how the higher manganese may cause the weldment to behave - should an extended stress relief be considered?
Comments/advice pls and thankyou.
Our simple spark test indicates the following:
C = .24
Mn = 1.42
Si = .34
Ni = .091
Cr = .12
Mo = .047
W = .083
V = .065
Al = .012
These ingredients seem to match fairly well to ASTM A516 Gr70 chemistry except for the higher Mn (1.42 v. 1.3 max). I have been told that older machines used high boron levels but my tester cannot detect Boron.
Anyway, my questions are threefold-
1. is there a better guess at what this alloy might be?
2. I am inclined to weld repair with SMAW 9018 rod, minimum preheat (say 150 deg F), no interpass temp restriction ?? (please comment on this) and no PWHT. Welds will be ~3/4" groove w 1/4" fillet reinforcement. Codes do not apply to this repair.
3. not sure how the higher manganese may cause the weldment to behave - should an extended stress relief be considered?
Comments/advice pls and thankyou.