Manufacturing Heat Treat News

Russian Hydraulic Cutting Tool Manufacturer Launches Commercial Heat Treatment

A Russian manufacturer of hydraulic cutting tools and rescue and emergency equipment recently extended its range of services by offering commercial heat treatment through its newly created subsidiary, TVN2.

SPRUT expanded its operation with a BMI double chamber vacuum furnace (B64TH for oil and gas quenching) and a second furnace for tempering and low-pressure nitriding (B54RN). This led to the launch of TVN2 to carry out the vacuum technology heat treatments, offering repeatability of results and giving the company control of the manufacturing process. With its own metallurgical laboratory on site, SPRUT, through TVN2, is able to offer hardness and microstructure analyses as additional services.

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Novel Refractory Relines Boost Furnace Performance

Original Content by Contributing Writer Ken Stanford

 

Furnace refractories are an essential consideration in thermal process equipment operations for optimizing efficiency, productivity, and performance as well as cutting operating costs.

To optimize furnace refractory lining, operational factors must be considered, such as furnace type, alloy composition, operating temperatures and melt rate, type of fuel used and charging and drossing practices. Furnace design is also critical, with factors including equipment type, static or tilting, capacity, desired casting temperature and position of freeze plane.

The service life of a furnace refractory lining is typically between four to 15 years, depending on the type of furnace and other variables including alloy type, melt rate, combustion system, scrap charging size and furnace practice. Contributing factors to refractory failure include corundum growth, mechanical damage, metal penetration, thermal shock, erosion and chemical attack.

Since 1974, the Pyrotek TAB Refractory Services team, based in Warrington, UK, has developed lining compositions and materials that can withstand harsh environments. The systems are pre-fired to 932°F (550°C), which eliminates water to allow for faster commissioning. A strong ceramic bond is developed and firing shrinkage is allowed that results in less stress relief cracking. Installation is not affected by ambient temperatures. Big-block systems can also be combined with castable or brick furnace linings, and to maximize service life, the company provides “zoned” refractory linings consisting of both cast-in-place and precast monolithic blocks. Employing the most suitable refractory materials for each different area of the furnace extends the lining’s durability and reduces furnace maintenance and downtime.

Figure 1. Big-block linings improve furnace performance and productivity

 

Examples of the work illustrate the key issues and routes to effective refractory relines. Here are recent projects where the company has provided refractory technology input:

  • The company designed and installed refractory components for a South African aluminum operation, then relined those components in 12 smelting furnaces.
  • Logan Aluminum Inc in Russellville, Kentucky, commissioned refractory lining for a new furnace designed to process flat-rolled aluminum sheet primarily for use in the beverage can market. The 340,000-pound (154-ton) tilting holding furnace, one of the largest in the world, was supplied by UK-based manufacturer Mechatherm International Ltd. Two low nitrogen-oxide burners allow the furnace to have holding and melting capacity. Furnace features include a large 33 foot (10 meter)-wide door, roof-mounted radar molten metal sensor and integration for an under hearth electromagnetic stirrer, Mechatherm says. The furnace is expected to begin operating later this year.
  • The refractory lining of six new aluminum melting furnaces was contracted by Mechatherm for the Novelis recycling plant in Nachterstedt, Germany. The plant was commissioned in 2014 and processes 881.8K pounds (400,000 tons) of aluminum scrap annually. Mechatherm believes that the melting furnaces are the biggest dual-chamber recycling units in the world. They comprise three 400,000-pound dual-chamber side well furnaces, which each has over 1 million pounds (500 tons) of refractory, and three 286.6K-pound (130-ton) side well furnaces with 661.4K pounds (300 tons) of refractory each. The company was later awarded the casthouse refractory maintenance contract.
  • A greenfield project in Saudi Arabia jointly owned by Alcoa and the Saudi Arabian Mining Co. (Ma’aden) were supplied turnkey refractory furnace linings by the company’s Saudi Arabian operation, TAB KSA. The integrated aluminum facility, which began pouring metal in 2012, includes an alumina refinery, a smelter, a casthouse and a rolling mill. The smelter has a capacity of 1.63M pounds (740,000 tons) per year. Pyrotek participated in what was reportedly the largest aluminum furnace refractory project in history. The equipment scope comprised: five 220,000-pound (100-ton) ingot furnaces, five 298,000-pound (135-ton) slab furnaces, three 187,000-pound (85-ton) billet furnaces, one 80,000-pound (36-ton) coil melter, one 198,000-pound (90-ton) remelt furnace, and two 265,000-pound (120-ton) used beverage can (UBC) side-well melters,

The company’s global refractory team and engineering centers work with aluminum operations to select the optimal refractory design and materials for their particular applications. In some cases, upgrading from brick to a non-wetting, corundum-resistant lining in smelting furnaces can increase ingot and billet casting capability. After a 5-year period, some customers reported that furnace downtime due to refractory repairs was reduced by up to 65 percent. Total furnace availability increased by up to 12.6 percent, and output increased by up to 26 percent. Refractory costs per pound of aluminum produced were reduced by up to 22.8 percent.

Furnace relines and maintenance for major aluminum companies around the world have been carried out with over 1,100 completed projects in more than 30 countries.


Ken Stanford formerly served as Group Managing Editor and Technical Director at DMG World Media in the UK, responsible for various metal, foundry, steel, and furnaces publications and associated conferences and exhibitions in the UK and overseas, including Aluminium International Today, and the ALUMINIUM series of events, which presents in Germany and the US. Particular industry interests center on new technologies, innovation, and applications, as well as sustainability and environmental issues.

 

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Precision Heat Treat, Aftermarket Suppliers Announce Cooperation

A German heat treat aftermarket supplier recently reached a cooperation with a European heat treating manufacturer for the production and distribution of heat treat systems for precision fine casting industries.

Linn High Therm GmbH and SAFED Suisse SA, a company of the Aichelin Group, announced the joint project in early 2018, wherein Linn High Therm GmbH will license the production of smaller heat treatment systems for watch, jewelry, and microsystems technology from SAFED’s product range. The agreement states that SAFED will take over the distribution of these products as well as the distribution and service of the products of Linn High Therm GmbH in Switzerland, France, Italy, and partly Germany through the existing sales and service network.

Both companies are experienced in the development and construction of electrically heated heat treatment plants. Linn High Therm GmbH specializes in the production of industrial and lab furnaces/ kilns, microwave furnaces, sample preparation units for spectroscopy, induction heating systems, precision fine casting systems and customer-specific systems. SAFED Suisse SA, based in Delémont, Switzerland, provides installations for the watchmaking and micromechanical industries.

Photo: Antoine Cantenot of SAFED Suisse SA and Horst Linn of Linn High Therm GmbH

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Heat Treating Mold Base Materials for Optimal Conditions

 

Source: ETMM-online

 

Heat treating plays a critical role in the making of a mold base, notes an Austrian manufacturer of standard parts for mould bases and die sets in a recent process prHigh-precision mould bases from stress relieved high-grade steel.ofile in ETMM-online.

An excerpt:

"Heat-treat[ing] all steel plates for stress relief . . . at approximately 580°C [1076°F] for 24 hours . . . creates optimal conditions for low-deformation processing of parts. . . . With stress-relieving heat treatment, the tension in the material is minimized without changes to the microstructure or strength. This is a great advantage during subsequent machining. If there was still tension in the material, it would, for example, cause deformation during sawing or milling. During stress-relieving, it is important to heat the plates slowly and consistently and then maintain this temperature for six hours."

Read more: "Producing the Ideal Material for Making a Mould Base"

 

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Heating Capacity Increased with Reopening of Swedish Mill

With the recent reopening of its drawing mill in Hallstahammar, Sweden, a leading supplier of industrial heating technology and resistance materials expects to meet an increased global demand for heating, resistance and thermocouple wire.

Nicklas Nilsson, president at Kanthal

Kanthal, which is part of the Sandvik Group, recently expanded its capacity by reopening its drawing mill, which includes a new production line designed in a flexible way to secure a sustainable and cost-effective wire drawing.

“We want to support our customers to grow and stay competitive. To be able to do this, we must ramp up our production of Kanthal® wire to secure short and reliable lead times,” said Christoffer Saarnio, global supply chain manager (shown above). “With the new production line, we will be able to meet increased demand for many years to come.”

“We have produced Kanthal wire in Hallstahammar since 1931, except for the past five years,” said Nicklas Nilsson, president at Kanthal. “It’s great to close the circle and once again see the drawing mill up and running.”

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Aluminum Extrusion Producer Increases No. American Coverage with Acquisition, New Facilities

A North American extrusion and forging grade billet producer recently announced plans to proceed with new aluminum remelt facilities for billet and slab ingot casting and related processes and services. This will involve new facilities, increasing the company’s existing 1 billion pounds per year capacity by 75%.

With this approval from the Giampaolo Group Management Board, Matalco increases capacity by 350 million pounds in Lordstown, Ohio, 180 million pounds in Canton, Ohio, 225
million pounds in Bluffton, Indiana (previously Alexin LLC), and 250 million pounds in Brampton, Ontario.

Tom Horter, president of Matalco USA Operations Photo credit: Light Metal Age

Earlier in the year, Matalco acquired Alexin LLC.

The catalyst for these investments is in response to the needs voiced by customers in under-served market geographies, their requirements for increased product breadth, and processing services for the vast and growing automotive fflat-rolled aluminum product supply chain and the product feature needs of specialty alloy aluminum billet markets.

“We are an established leader in the remelt aluminum business. Matalco’s four existing aluminum plants have the broadest product offering and flexibility for providing closed loop, scrap-based billet, and slab ingot products,” said Tom Horter, president of Matalco USA Operations noted. “The proven capabilities of our people, assets, and technologies provide the nucleus and granularity for understanding market challenges and generating the solutions to meet the
future supply chain requirements of our customers.”

Horter added, “The recent integration of Alexin into Matalco has provided the right base for new employee training and innovative product and process development enabling speed to
market in these growing niche areas, bringing to life the exciting business possibilities to attain the Giampaolo Group’s medium and long-term objectives for our businesses.”

Matalco has not announced the number of plants that have been approved, nor their exact locations.

“Our team has been working with state and local economic representatives in the Upper Midwest states of Michigan, Illinois, Wisconsin, and Minnesota, and the southern states of Alabama, Tennessee, and Kentucky,” said Frank Mastrandrea, from the Giampaolo Group Management Board.

Photo credit: Vecohio

 

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Good Design Practices Lengthen Induction Tooling Life

 

Source: Fluxtrol.com

 

Induction heat treaters know that proper coil design is crucial to increasing longevity, improving production quality, and cutting costs. The authors of this paper on Coil Design Techniques (C. Yakey, V. Nemkov, R. Goldstein, J. Jackowski) draw on an extensive library of published case histories in induction coil design and performance evaluations and provide their own case study of an automotive CVJ stem hardening coil in order to demonstrate how the elimination of failure points and application of improved design guidelines can result in increased coil lifetimes, even in an inductor that in some circumstances can have a short lifetime.

An excerpt:

 “The quality of an induction coil is a major determinant of the cost to produce induction heat treated components. Oftentimes, the difference between a well designed and manufactured inductor and a poor performing inductor is not readily apparent. However, a high-quality induction coil can lead to substantially lower component manufacturing costs and higher profitability for the induction heat treater.”

Read more: “Best Practice for Design and Manufacturing of Heat Treating Inductors”

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Auto Components Manufacturer to Restart Heat Treating Facility

A refractory materials provider in Newark, New York, recently announced its acquisition of the assets of a refractory sales and service business, expanding its construction capabilities.

Dave Wetmore, URS president

With this acquisition of Hanyan-Higgins Company, Upstate Refractory Services Inc (URS) will continue to offer Plibrico refractory products across upstate, central, and western New York, in addition to providing uninterrupted service to Hanyan-Higgins customers. The purchase will also allow URS to expand into three new New York locations, including Syracuse, Albany, and Massena.

“We are delighted to have purchased the assets of Hanyan-Higgins Company,” said Dave Wetmore, URS president. “We’re proud to carry on their history of service and commitment provided to customers, and look forward to continued growth as a result of this purchase.”

 

Photo credit: Wayne County Industrial Development Agency

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Heat Treaters Must Aim for Right Balance in Processing Stainless Steels

 

Source: Paulo

 

Heat treatment of stainless steels calls for striking the right balance between effective corrosion resistance and maintaining machinability and formability. An analysis of the types of stainless steels and the annealing process was recently published to examine how different alloys respond to various forms of heat treatment.

 

Read more: “How Heat Treating and Annealing Stainless Steel Impacts Corrosion Resistance and Polishing”

 

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Heat Treating Enables Handgun Conversions

Adam Devine, CEO, co-founder, and head of R&D, Ranger Point Precision

A Texas-based manufacturer of custom-built, match-grade rifles and performance parts for rifles and pistols recently announced that superior vacuum heat treatment capabilities result in the expansion of its line of parts for Steyr Arms Inc. A-1 pistols.

Ranger Point Precision, based near Houston, Texas, reported that their advanced heat treating process and salt bath black nitride allows for the conversion of any 40 S&W pistols to a .357 Sig, delivering match-grade accuracy, increased durability, reduced chamber friction, and extended barrel life. The expanded line includes both standard and threaded options along with thread protectors and mini-comps for .357 Sig / 9mm calibers.

“We start with premium Douglas barrel blanks with precise rifling, then use minimum spec chamber reamers, and the most advanced methods for heat treating and salt bath black nitride to produce the best Steyr pistol barrel available on the market,” said Adam Devine, CEO, co-founder, and head of R&D, Ranger Point Precision.

Steyr .357 pistol barrels are vacuum heat treated to 42 HRC and salt bath black nitride coated, giving them a surface hardness above 80 HRC.

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