Most heat treaters will provide a certification with hardness
information. Keep in mind that hardness does not guarantee
microstructure, and it is the microstructure that ultimately
delivers the desired mechanical performance. This
does not mean that you should not accept a certification
with hardness readings. Rather, it means that you should
make sure that your heat treater has the ability to design
a capable heat treat process for your component that is
carefully controlled. Hardness is a very powerful tool, but
only when you have a capable process that is carefully controlled.
If you desire additional tests like a microstructure
or tensile tests, find out if your heat treater has the capabilities
to do the testing in-house or if you need to arrange for
an outside A2LA-accredited facility to do the work.
Q:Do you have any material and/or process recommendations
to improve the functionality of my component
or to reduce cost?
Your heat treater can be an invaluable resource. All you
have to do is ask. An example of potential assistance that
your heat treater might be able to provide includes:
- Part design considerations that may save you money
such as how to optimize the shape of the component
for heat treatment;
- Customized fixtures to minimize shape changes that
will require post heat treatment machining or finishing
steps;
- Optimum lot sizes for heat treatment to minimize costs
that could result from processing partial loads.
Batch Furnace (courtesy of AFC Holcroft).
- Click image to enlarge
Q:Can I tour your heat treat facility?
Observations about cleanliness and organization of
work flow will convey important information about the way
a heat treater runs the shop, and ultimately how your work
will be handled.
Q:What is the typical turnaround time for heat treatment?
Will you provide a priority contact list in case
I have a question or problem?
It is not unreasonable to ask your heat treater to produce
data on turnaround time for the past year. Any business
has seasonal peaks and valleys, which will affect turnaround
time. Furthermore, you should know who to contact
for shipping concerns, production scheduling, technical
questions, etc. An email address, while useful, won’t help if
you have a matter that needs immediate attention. Make
sure you receive phone numbers that will eventually be
answered by a human being.
Custom fixturing for gear heat treating
(courtesy of Applied Process).
- Click image to enlarge
Questions to Ask Your Heat Treater Provided by
Mike Reichling and Ty Cooper (Cincinnati Steel
Treating, Cincinnati, OH)
Q:Are you experienced in heat treating gearing?
Heat treating a forging or a piece of bar is one
thing, heat treating gearing is another. Typically when the
heat treater sees it, it’s semi-finished, meaning there are
very few finishing operations to go afterwards. The heat
treater has to be somewhat familiar with how to handle
gearing. You just don’t throw it in a basket — you treat it
with care and respect; you fixture it properly to try to minimize
any distortion. So you want to find someone who has
a certain level of experience.
There are different methods of hardening or heat
treating parts. It depends on what’s required. Does [the
customer] need induction hardening; does [the customer]
need flame hardening; does [the customer] need it nitrided
or nitrocarburized? A heat treater experienced with gearing
should be well-versed in all types of heat treating as it
relates to gearing. He may not offer all the processes, but
he should be knowledgeable about them and be able to
recommend someone who can.
Q:Are you interested in being involved from design to
finish?
This is really a pet-peeve of ours. Many times, we’ll get a part in here and say, “Oh God, that’s a nightmare to heat
treat.” We encourage customers to get us involved at the
beginning. Many times there are things that are let go
that could be stopped; there are things they can do that
would help the part not distort as much during heat treat.
Generally, once you heat treat it, at best you’re going to
grind and then the stock allowance is minimal — especially
if you have a very flimsy, light gear. So the time to talk to
your heat treater is at the beginning, before all that happens.
Let your heat treater get involved in the manufacturing
and design process, because he knows how it’s going to
react during heat treat.
Q:How big of a part can you handle as it relates to
each process offered?
Each process is a little different. Can he induction harden a
part that’s 40" in diameter, or can he only carburize it? You
have to decide what process you want and then find a heat
treater who can offer that in that size of part.
Q:Do you have your own metallurgical lab or do you
rely on an outside lab for testing?
It’s very important that the heat treater have his own inhouse
lab where he can do microstructure analysis, microhardening
analysis and carbon analysis. If you rely on an
outside lab, then you’re going to add time to the process.
Most customers don’t have that luxury of extra time. Once
they make that delivery to the heat treater, they’re usually
very close to the delivery schedule or they’re already late. You have to have your own lab, and customers need to
make sure they’re going to a heat treat with a lab and an
experienced staff who knows how to use it. This could save
several days.
Q:What specifications and/or certifications do you
work to as it relates to gear manufacturing?
A lot of the requirements for heat treating gearing will reference
a specification. The heat treater has to be certified
to this specification or they have to be able to work to a
given specification. For instance, in gearing, it’s an AGMA
standard. There are also ASM standards, where there are
very specific requirements you have to meet: the furnace
has to meet this certain uniformity; the carbon has to be
within a certain range. I would say that not all heat treaters
work to those standards. Probably, for gearing, only about
80% of heat treaters have those specifications.
Photo courtesy of Cincinnati Steel Treating
- Click image to enlarge
Q:Do you offer copper plating as a maskant?
Oftentimes — and this is strictly for carburizing
— there are areas on the gear that don’t need to be hard.
Many heat treaters will mask those areas off with a paint.
Copper plating is 100% effective, while painting is probably
90% effective. Very few heat treaters offer plating, as well.
Generally, they can recommend a good plater.
Q:What is the deepest case depth you feel comfortable
achieving, and what method of testing is used
to verify the case depth achieved?
The case depth is time- and temperature-dependent. The deeper the case, the longer it takes. You may get some heat
treat companies that don’t want to tie up their furnace for
more than 20 hours at a time, so they will only carburize
a part so deep. We run some parts here that will be in the
furnace for five days, because they want a quarter-inch case
depth. It really depends on the place.
Q:Do you have a metallurgist on staff?
This goes in line with a previous question. Today’s
[metallurgists] are just not yesterday’s [metallurgists].
Today’s people are more material scientists; they deal with
ceramics, polymers and things like that. The old-time [metallurgists]
just know steels and irons and aluminum. So
does the heat treater have someone with experience in the
kinds of materials that the customer wants processed?
Photo courtesy of Cincinnati Steel Treating.
- Click image to enlarge
Q:Do you have any experience with failure analysis as
it relates to gearing?
Whether it was something they heat treated or something
somebody else heat treated, if they have experience at failure
analysis, then they’re experienced in heat treating gearing.
They can offer a lot in pre-design with that information
that they have. It’s not very common for heat treaters to be
experienced in this.
For more information:
Applied Process, Inc.
(734) 464-8000
www.appliedprocess.com
Cincinnati Steel Treating
(513) 271-3173
www.steeltreating.com
Joyworks LLC
(734) 775-3437
www.joyworksstudio.com
About Author
Erik Schmidt, Assistant Editor, has a Bachelor’s degree in journalism from Marquette University. He has a decorated writing history that includes stops at various journalistic enterprises in the Chicagoland area where he covered sports and hyperlocal news. He joined the staff of both Gear Technology and Power Transmission Engineering in 2014.