What is the History of the Welding Process? What are Welding Methods? What are the Types of Welding and Advantage of Welding? What Is Welding By heating two or more surfaces to a melting point, welding joins two or more pieces of metal or thermoplastic. Typically, this process involves applying heat and pressure to the surfaces being joined, causing the materials to melt and fuse. History of the Welding History of Welding Method/Process · Earliest stage of welding is known as forge welding · 16th century - Soldering process used for brazing silver and copper · 18th century - Gas welding and Arc welding · 19th century - Fusion welding, Metal electrode welding and Carbon arc welding. · 20th century - Electric arc welding Several new...
Raw Materials
Steel alloys are the most commonly used spring materials. The most
popular alloys include high-carbon
Design
Various mathematical equations have been developed to describe the
properties of springs, based on such factors as wire composition and size,
spring coil diameter, the number of coils, and the amount of expected external
force. These equations have been incorporated into computer software to
simplify the design process.
The Manufacturing Process
1 Cold winding.
A guiding mechanism, such as the lead screw on a lathe, must be
used to align the wire into the desired pitch (distance between successive
coils) as it wraps around the mandrel.
2 Hot
winding.
Thicker
wire or bar stock can be coiled into springs if the metal is heated to make it
flexible. Standard industrial coiling machines can handle steel bar up to 3 in
(75 mm) in diameter, and custom springs have reportedly been made from bars as
much as 6 in (150 mm) thick. The steel is coiled around a mandrel while red
hot. Then it is immediately removed from the coiling machine and plunged into
oil to cool it quickly and harden it. At this stage, the steel is too brittle
to function as a spring, and it must subsequently be tempered
3 Heat
treating.
Whether
the steel has been coiled hot or cold, the process has created stress within
the material. To relieve this stress and allow the steel to maintain its
characteristic resilience, the spring must be tempered by heat treating it. The
spring is heated in an oven, held at the appropriate temperature for a
predetermined time, and then allowed to cool slowly. For example, a spring made
of music wire is heated to 500°F (260°C) for one hour.
4
Grinding.
If the
design calls for flat ends on the spring, the ends are ground at this stage of
the manufacturing process. The spring is mounted in a jig to ensure the correct
orientation during grinding, and it is held against a rotating abrasive wheel until
the desired degree of flatness is obtained. When highly automated equipment is
used, the spring is held in a sleeve while both ends are ground simultaneously,
first by coarse wheels and then by finer wheels. An appropriate fluid (water or
an oil-based substance) may be used to cool the spring, lubricate the grinding
wheel, and carry away particles during the grinding.
5 Shot
peening.
This
process strengthens the steel to resist metal fatigue and cracking during its
lifetime of repeated flexings. The entire surface of the spring is exposed to a
barrage of tiny steel balls that hammer it smooth and compress the steel that
lies just below the surface.
6
Setting.
To
permanently fix the desired length and pitch of the spring, it is fully
compressed so that all the coils touch each other. Some manufacturers repeat
this process several times.
7
Coating.
To
prevent corrosion, the entire surface of the spring is protected by painting
it, dipping it in liquid rubber, or plating it with another metal such as zinc
or chromium. One process, called mechanical plating, involves tumbling the
spring in a container with metallic powder, water, accelerant chemicals, and
tiny glass beads that pound the metallic powder onto the spring surface.
Alternatively,
in electroplating, the spring is immersed in an electrically conductive liquid
that will corrode the plating metal but not the spring. A negative electrical
charge is applied to the spring. Also immersed in the liquid is a supply of the
plating metal, and it is given a positive electrical charge. As the plating
metal dissolves in the liquid, it releases positively charged molecules that
are attracted to the negatively charged spring, where they bond chemically.
Electroplating makes carbon steel springs brittle, so shortly after plating
(less than four hours) they must be baked at 325-375°F (160-190°C) for four
hours to counteract the embrittlement.
8
Packaging.
Desired
quantities of springs may simply be bulk packaged in boxes or plastic bags.
However, other forms of packaging have been developed to minimize damage or
tangling of springs. For example, they may be individually bagged, strung onto
wires or rods, enclosed in tubes, or affixed to sticky paper.
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