Papers - Metallography - Variations in Microstructure Inherent in Processes of Manufacturing Extruded and Forged Brass

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Ogden B. Malin
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
10
File Size:
2056 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1932

Abstract

In conducting the manufacture of extruded brass rods and brass forgings it has been noticed that there is considerable variation in the physical properties, particularly the machinability of different rods and forgings, even though the composition, working temperatures and method of manufacture remain the same. It is the purpose of this paper to attempt to establish the cause and extent of this variation, and also to determine whether variations in composition within certain defined limits influence hardness and machinability to any marked degree. The writer believes that this variation probably is due to the variation in grain size of the metal, therefore the microstructures of several compositions under various conditions of working were examined in an effort to establish this as a fact. Survey of Previous Work in Studying Extrusion Defects Very little has been published concerning defects in extruded and forged brass. In 1921, R. Genders1 $ delivered a paper before the British Institute of Metals, relative to a defect inherent in the extrusion process. This defect, commonly found in extruded brass rod, shows up in the form of a circle in a transverse section consisting of oxides and impurities, and is generally present in the last 25 to 30 per cent of the rod. Genders concluded that the defect is caused by the turning inward of the skin of the billet at the edge of the plunger because the inside of the billet is more plastic than the outside, which is in contact with the cooler container; the outside skin will lag behind to form the rear end of the rod. Genders suggested a movable die as a remedy, and while this met with fair success, it is not used in present practice. About the same time as Genders' experiments, Tucker2 and Rosen-hain3 conducted experiments using colored plasticene in the form of a billet, and found much the same defect as Genders. Dr. Rosenhain State College, Pa.
Citation

APA: Ogden B. Malin  (1932)  Papers - Metallography - Variations in Microstructure Inherent in Processes of Manufacturing Extruded and Forged Brass

MLA: Ogden B. Malin Papers - Metallography - Variations in Microstructure Inherent in Processes of Manufacturing Extruded and Forged Brass. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1932.

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