Tmoose
Mechanical
- Apr 12, 2003
- 5,633
A customer has requested a quote for some parts that we normally have cast from high chrome Abrasion resistant cast iron ASTM A532 Class III type A.
In their RFQ they have some specifications. One is the hardness they want ( 500 HB minimum ). There also is some chemistry (Cr, Mo, Ni ). That chemistry falls in the range of ASTM A532 Class III type A.
The last element in the customer's chemistry is " 0.72 Zr ". As best I can tell that // should be // Zirconium.
1 - The ASTM A532 spec includes several more elements, but does NOT even mention Zirconium.
None of the cast iron references I have mention zirconium.
2 - A little Googling suggests .05 to .15% zirconium ( about 1/5 of our customer's Zr requirement) in regular ferrous alloys may reduce porosity, or improve toughness by spheroidizing sulfate inclusions in HSLA with a result of improved toughness.
3 - Volume 1 of the ninth Edition of the ASM Metals Handbook repeats the HSLA toughness effect a few times.
Before I ask our customer to confirm the .72 Zr I figured I'd ask the folks on Eng-tips what to make of it.
thanks,
Dan T
In their RFQ they have some specifications. One is the hardness they want ( 500 HB minimum ). There also is some chemistry (Cr, Mo, Ni ). That chemistry falls in the range of ASTM A532 Class III type A.
The last element in the customer's chemistry is " 0.72 Zr ". As best I can tell that // should be // Zirconium.
1 - The ASTM A532 spec includes several more elements, but does NOT even mention Zirconium.
None of the cast iron references I have mention zirconium.
2 - A little Googling suggests .05 to .15% zirconium ( about 1/5 of our customer's Zr requirement) in regular ferrous alloys may reduce porosity, or improve toughness by spheroidizing sulfate inclusions in HSLA with a result of improved toughness.
3 - Volume 1 of the ninth Edition of the ASM Metals Handbook repeats the HSLA toughness effect a few times.
Before I ask our customer to confirm the .72 Zr I figured I'd ask the folks on Eng-tips what to make of it.
thanks,
Dan T