Speaking of Precision Blog

Speaking of Precision

Speaking of Precision is a knowledge preservation and thought leadership blog covering the precision machining industry, its materials and services. With over 36 years of hands on experience in steelmaking, manufacturing, quality, and management, Miles Free (Milo) Director of Industry Research and Technology at PMPA helps answer "How?" "With what?" and occasionally "Really?"

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Three Actions To Minimize Cracks In Our Shops

Posted November 26, 2010 8:45 AM by Milo

Paying attention to draft, chemistry, and steel melt source processes can help you minimize the potential for cracks at your customer after cold work operations.

After a crimping, staking or swaging operation, cracks can develop. This is because the cold work needed to swage, stake, crimp, etc. was greater than the material's available elasticity. This is the case in the part photographed here.

Cracks can develop after cold work is performed on machined parts.

In order to minimize cracking during or after crimping, or thread rolling, or other substantial cold work, take the following steps:

  1. Specify non-renitrogenized material;
  2. Inform your supplier of your cold work application. They can consider reducing cold draft, or changing suppliers of the hot roll to get basic oxygen process, low residual, low nitrogen steel;
  3. Ask the customer to consider changing the grade. Resulfurized steels are capable of being somewhat cold worked, but their high volume fraction and weight percent of nonmetallic inclusions (What makes them cut so well!) is also what works against successful cold work.

To minimize the occurrence of cracks that are not a result of cold work, try this:

  • Assure that adequate stock removal is taken in machining;
  • Buying from reputable sources whose quality systems employ rototesting and eddy current testing;

When cracks are discovered in your shop, what actions do you take?

Editor's Note: CR4 would like to thank Milo for sharing this blog entry, which originally appeared here.

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#1

Re: Three Actions To Minimize Cracks In Our Shops

11/27/2010 7:04 AM

Just tell all the woment to stay out of the shop!!!

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#2
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Re: Three Actions To Minimize Cracks In Our Shops

11/27/2010 5:26 PM

Proably not your most thoughtful post, Andy, but probably will get a few chuckles out of the hammer pounding gallery...

Milo

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#3
In reply to #2

Re: Three Actions To Minimize Cracks In Our Shops

11/28/2010 3:43 AM

PERZACTLY!!!

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#4
In reply to #3

Re: Three Actions To Minimize Cracks In Our Shops

05/14/2021 8:33 AM

Very is a British online retailer headquartered in Speke, Liverpool. The brand was launched in the UK in July 2009 as part of the Shop Direct Group. Very was formerly Littlewoods Direct.

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