bob1111
Aerospace
- Oct 14, 2008
- 68
We are wanting to bring a case hardening process in house for some parts we are making. We are primarily looking at 8620 as the material. These are auto transmission parts. We would like to buy the material in the pre-hard condition (125ksi), machine the parts, then apply a surface hardening technique with a kiln. We are primarily looking at nitriding with Ammonia gas because it seems the safest and most practical but wondering if that process is ideal for 8620 with it's Chromium and Moly content to acheive our target hardness of HRC 60-62 with .010" thickness.
Also, would it be typical to apply a tempering technique after the surface hardening?
If nitriding is not idea for this material, are there other materials that work better with gas nitriding or possibly other surface hardening techniques that would work for a small in-house situation? ie, Cyanide gas, Methane gas in a hot oven, etc do not sound safe enough for some rookie heat treaters like us.
I have not checked as of yet but wondering if Ammonia gas is even available without special licensing.
Also, would it be typical to apply a tempering technique after the surface hardening?
If nitriding is not idea for this material, are there other materials that work better with gas nitriding or possibly other surface hardening techniques that would work for a small in-house situation? ie, Cyanide gas, Methane gas in a hot oven, etc do not sound safe enough for some rookie heat treaters like us.
I have not checked as of yet but wondering if Ammonia gas is even available without special licensing.