namelessudhay
Mechanical
- May 24, 2010
- 20
Hi,
I am facing a gear root bending failure in one of our commercial application transmissions. Due to practical reasons, changing any dimension is impossible.
The gear is made of 20MnCr5, gas carburized. Couple of seniors are suggesting to go with EN353 instead. Two reasons:
1. EN353 is stronger.
2. It is easily available.
I am trying to understand how EN353 is stronger. I see the carbon percentage of both the materials to be closely same. However, these are some material composition differences I find:
EN353 has got:
1. Less manganese
2. More Phosphorus
3. Nickel present - 1 to 1.5%
4. Molybdenum present - 0.08 to 0.15%
I am not a metallurgy guy. I would request some experts here to explain these chemical differences help EN353 to become a stronger candidate. Thanks.
I am facing a gear root bending failure in one of our commercial application transmissions. Due to practical reasons, changing any dimension is impossible.
The gear is made of 20MnCr5, gas carburized. Couple of seniors are suggesting to go with EN353 instead. Two reasons:
1. EN353 is stronger.
2. It is easily available.
I am trying to understand how EN353 is stronger. I see the carbon percentage of both the materials to be closely same. However, these are some material composition differences I find:
EN353 has got:
1. Less manganese
2. More Phosphorus
3. Nickel present - 1 to 1.5%
4. Molybdenum present - 0.08 to 0.15%
I am not a metallurgy guy. I would request some experts here to explain these chemical differences help EN353 to become a stronger candidate. Thanks.