Notes on the Heat Treatment of High-Speed Steel Tools (0bd4ba66-f13b-42e7-9997-22fb1d86722d)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
3
File Size:
197 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 6, 1917

Abstract

HENRY M. HOWE, Bedford Hills, N. T. (communication to the Secretary?).-The authors valuable results as to the effects of the air-hardening temperature on high-speed steel may be summed up thus: Influence of Rising Air-Hardening Temperature on. High-Speed Steel Air-hardening microstructure Cutting Properties temperature S Austenite Grain Free Carbide Grains Boundaries Too low Small or Narrow Maximum Too soft undeveloped Intermediate, Well-developed Intermediate Little or even Best correct none Too high Coarse hide, even with Minimum . Weak, brittle, three-rayed crumbling stars Here the suggestion is that as the air-hardening temperature rises it causes two prominent effects, one helpful and the other harmful, the increase of the former exceeding that; of the latter up to a certain point, at which the steel is most useful, and then in turn being outrun by it. The first is the progressive dissolving of the free carbide in the austenite, increasing the stability of the red-hard state. The second is the progressive coarsening of the grains, and thickening of the intergranular cement, developing at last into spandril-like three-rayed stars of the 1,288° specimen. (2,350° F.) of Plate D, thus giving clear proof of incipient fusion, that is of crossing the solidus. This causes intergranular weakness. The individual grains may have great red-hardness, but they do not cohere. They approach the condition of a bag of emery grains.
Citation

APA:  (1917)  Notes on the Heat Treatment of High-Speed Steel Tools (0bd4ba66-f13b-42e7-9997-22fb1d86722d)

MLA: Notes on the Heat Treatment of High-Speed Steel Tools (0bd4ba66-f13b-42e7-9997-22fb1d86722d). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1917.

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