New York Paper - Flaky and Woody Fractures in Nickel-steel Gun Forgings (with Discussion)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
C. Y. Clayton
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
35
File Size:
5733 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1920

Abstract

In connection with certain cooperative work carried on between the Ordnance Department of the U. S. Army, the U. S. Bureau of Mines, and the U. S. Geological Survey during the year 1918, it was the writers' privilege to make metallographic examinations of a great many test bars and other pieces of nickel-steel gun forgings. The material studied came from many different steel plants throughout the country and consisted both of forgings that had been accepted by the Ordnance Department and those that had failed to pass the specified physical tests. In general, these tests require a minimum tensile strength of 95,000 lb. (42,091 kg.)! an elastic limit of 65,000 lb. (29,483 kg.), an 18 per cent, elongation, and a 30 per cent. reduction in area. An average chemical composition of the steel studied is 0.38 per cent. carbon and 2.9 per cent. nickel. The steel was of both basic electric and basic open-hearth manufacture. The object of the metallographic work was twofold: to assist in detecting defects in the steel and, if possible, to suggest remedies for the same; and to obtain as much information as possible in regard to the relation of the microstructure of the metal to its physical properties. The grcatcr part of the investigation was devoted to defective metal that failed to pass the ordnance specifications. Many types and kinds of more or less serious defects thus came under observation, but most of these were due to the attempts by the manufacturer to meet the enormous demand for ordnance steel with more or less inadequate equipment, and were soon remedied. Two defects, the so-called "flakes" or "snowflakes" and a certain "fibrous" or "woody" fracture, were encountered so frequently and were so disastrous to the steel that the greater part of the study was devoted to them. As a result much information as to their nature and their effects upon the steel and something in regard to some of the conditions that favor their development has been obtained. The purpose of the present
Citation

APA: C. Y. Clayton  (1920)  New York Paper - Flaky and Woody Fractures in Nickel-steel Gun Forgings (with Discussion)

MLA: C. Y. Clayton New York Paper - Flaky and Woody Fractures in Nickel-steel Gun Forgings (with Discussion). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1920.

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