Lyrl
Materials
- Jan 29, 2015
- 67
I work at a commercial heat treater. We have a customer who is considering using 431 material in pipes for oil field service (I'm not sure exactly what goes through the pipes). It would be tempered below 700° to ensure meeting their Charpy minimums. After hardening and tempering, the hardness would be 43-46 HRC (based on samples we have run).
Their engineer is concerned about having a product with hardness about 40 HRC, but wasn't able to articulate a particular reason. I believe he's thinking of something like stress-corrosion cracking, which I know a material such as 4140 is much more susceptible to at hardnesses above 40 HRC. Does 431 material have this same vulnerability at higher hardnesses?
Their engineer is concerned about having a product with hardness about 40 HRC, but wasn't able to articulate a particular reason. I believe he's thinking of something like stress-corrosion cracking, which I know a material such as 4140 is much more susceptible to at hardnesses above 40 HRC. Does 431 material have this same vulnerability at higher hardnesses?