AeroSPC

Heat Treat Tips: Safety and Cost-Saving Hacks

During the day-to-day operation of heat treat departments, many habits are formed and procedures followed that sometimes are done simply because that’s the way they’ve always been done. One of the great benefits of having a community of heat treaters is to challenge those habits and look at new ways of doing things. Heat Treat Today‘101 Heat Treat Tips, tips and tricks that come from some of the industry’s foremost experts, were initially published in the FNA 2018 Special Print Edition, as a way to make the benefits of that community available to as many people as possible. This special edition is available in a digital format here.

Today we continue an intermittent series of posts drawn from the 101 tips. The tips for this post come from a variety of categories but all generally address safety or cost-saving ideas. 


Dr. Valery Rudnev, FASM, Fellow of IFHTSE, Professor Induction, Director Science & Technology, Inductoheat Inc., An Inductotherm Group company

Heat Treat Tip #2

Avoid axle shaft cracks after induction tempering

Situation: In induction scan hardening of axle shafts, there was NO cracking occurred after scan hardening (case depth varies from 5 mm to 8 mm). Cracks appeared in the spline region after induction tempering.
Solution: Most likely, the cause of this problem is associated with a reversal of residual stress distribution during induction tempering. Reduce coil power for tempering and increase time of induction tempering. Multi-pulse induction tempering applying lower power density might also help. As an alternative, instead of modifying temper cycle, you can also try to reduce quench severity by increasing the temperature of the quenchant and/or its concentration.

Submitted by Dr. Valery Rudnev, FASM, Fellow of IFHTSE, Professor Induction, Director Science & Technology, Inductoheat Inc., An Inductotherm Group company


Heat Treat Tip #4

Closed Loop Water System on Top

When designing a vacuum furnace installation with a closed loop water system, elevate the tank and pump about 9 feet, then cage the space underneath for thermocouple storage, spares, and tools. Saves shop floor space.

Submitted by AeroSPC


IR Cameras are inexpensive and worth the price.

Heat Treat Tip #6

Don’t Be Cheap. Buy an IR Camera.

IR cameras have come way down in price—for a thousand dollars, you can have x-ray vision and see furnace insulation problems before they cause major problems—also a great diagnostic tool for motors, circuit breakers, etc. (And you can spot deer in the dark!)

Submitted by Combustion Innovations

 

 


Heat Treat Tip #7

An Engineer’s Design Checklist

Get an SCR design checklist and avoid mistakes.

When SCRs are involved in the design of a new piece of equipment, questions arise. Control Concepts Inc of Chanhassen, MN, offers a 20-point design checklist to help engineers who don’t specialize in power controllers. Good reading. Search for “design checklist” at the website.

Submitted by Control Concepts, Inc.


Heat Treat Tip #9

Question the Spec! Save Money!

Before you specify a heat treatment, stop and consider your options. Rather than reusing an old specification, ask the design engineer to determine the stress profile, and base the hardness or case depth on real stress data. Is this complicated? Maybe. But especially for carburizing, why pay for more depth than you need, and why take the risk of inadequate strength? The 21st century is here. We have ways to help with the math. Let’s move beyond guess and test engineering methodology.

Submitted by Debbie Aliya

 

 

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Meet the Consultants: Matt Orfe

Heat Treat Today recently unveiled its Heat Treat Consultants page in the October 2018 print edition (available in digital format here) and at FNA in Indianapolis, Indiana. We offer this comprehensive listing of heat treat industry consultants as part of our efforts to help minimize the effects of heat treat “brain drain.” With so many heat treat brains growing older, the expertise that once used to reside inside of manufacturing operations is dwindling. Where, then, do manufacturers with in-house heat treat departments go when they need heat treat answers?

Turn to Heat Treat Today and our comprehensive list of heat treat industry consultants, which we will introduce to you one by one in this occasional feature, “Meet the Consultants”. There is no more comprehensive list of heat treat consultants. Learn more about Matt Orfe of AeroSPC, Inc., and then click through to the page to read more details about each consultant. We are adding more regularly. Contact them directly, or call us and we’ll introduce you to them. Whether it’s a technical process question, a safety concern, a compliance issue, or a business related question, one of our heat treat consultants will be able to help. If you are a consultant and would like to be listed, please contact Doug Glenn


Name: Matt Orfe
Company Name: AeroSPC, Inc.
Location: Independence, Ohio, USA
Years In Industry: 30+
Consulting Specialties:

  • Manufacturing & Lean Manufacturing
  • Product Development; Int’l Sales
  • Continuous Improvement
  • Metallurgy; FMEA

EmailWebsite | Phone: (856) 220-7974

Briefly:

Matt Orfe brings over 30 years of experience to the heat-treating and foundry industries. He holds an informed and practical perspective on the industry, having held positions from the factory floor all the way to upper management. He is an expert on equipment solutions and finding the perfect resources for process needs. His training program, “The ABC’s of VAB,” is geared toward companies that are looking to begin vacuum aluminum brazing or have lost process knowledge and wish to regain VAB ability. He is currently the head of sales and VAB product management for Aero SPC, Inc. Matt specializes in lean manufacturing, product development, and international sales.

Publications or Significant Accomplishments:

  1. International Sales Manager for Inductotherm Corp. (1970-1983).
  2. Division Manager for Electrical Melting Services Co. (1992-2007).
  3. Vacuum Brazing Product Manager for Consarc Corp. (2007-2014).
  4. Head of Sales and VAB product management for Aero SPC, Inc.
  5. Presented on “Advancements in Vacuum Aluminum Brazing” at the 2012 AeroMat Conference and Exposition.
  6. Creator of the training program, “The ABC’s of VAB.”

Links to Heat Treat Today or Other Online Resources

References available upon request from Consultant

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Heat Treat Tips: Burn Out vs. Bake Out

During the day-to-day operation of heat treat departments, many habits are formed and procedures followed that sometimes are done simply because that’s the way they’ve always been done. One of the great benefits of having a community of heat treaters is to challenge those habits and look at new ways of doing things. Heat Treat Today101 Heat Treat Tips, tips and tricks that come from some of the industry’s foremost experts, were initially published in the FNA 2018 Special Print Edition, as a way to make the benefits of that community available to as many people as possible. This special edition is available in a digital format here.

Today we offer one of the 101 tips, which was provided by AeroSPC and originally published under Miscellaneous Tips. 


Heat Treat Tip #42

Burn Out vs. Bake Out: What’s the Diff?

Many organizations use the term burn out and bake out to be the same event. Others have burn out understood to be 50°F above prior maximum temperature after the braze process for a short period. Bake out then is a “close to max” temperature of the oven maintained for over an hour. If your organization is using these terms, ensure that they are internally defined and in alignment with the terms used in your customer specifications.

This tip was submitted by AeroSPC.


If you have any questions, feel free to contact the expert who submitted the Tip or contact Heat Treat Today directly. If you have a heat treat tip that you’d like to share, please send to the editor, and we’ll put it in the queue for our next Heat Treat Tips issue. 

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