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Glossary of Terms

A slender, needle-like (acicular) microstructure appearing in spring steel strip characterized by toughness and greater ductility than tempered Martensite. Bainite is a decomposition product of Austenite (see Austenite) best developed at interrupted holding temperatures below those forming fine pearlite and above those giving Martensite.

Various tests used to determine the toughness and ductility of flat rolled metal sheet, strip or plate, in which the material is bent around its axis or around an outside radius. A complete test might specify such a bend to be both with and against the direction of grain. For testing, samples should be edge filed to remove burrs and any edgewise cracks resulting from slitting or shearing. If a vice is to be used then line the jaws with some soft metal or brass, so as to permit a free flow of the metal in the sample being tested.

An alloy of copper and 2-3% beryllium with optionally fractional percentages of nickel or cobalt. Alloys of this series show remarkable age-hardening properties and an ultimate hardness of about 400 Brinell (Rockwell C43). Because of such hardness and good electrical conductivity, beryllium-copper is used in electrical switches, springs, etc.

(Scaleless Blue.) A flat cold rolled usually .70/60 medium high carbon spring steel strip, blue-black in color, which has been quenched in oil and drawn to desired hardness. While it looks and acts much like blue tempered spring steel and carries a Rockwell hardness of C 44/47, it has not been polished and is lower in carbon content.. Used for less exacting requirements than clock spring steel, such as snaps, lock springs, hold down springs, trap springs, etc. It will take a more severe bend before fracture than will clock spring, but it does not have the same degree of

A light weight or a thin uncoated steel sheet or strip so called because of its dark oxide coloring prior to pickling. It is manufactured by two different processes. (1) From sheet bar on single stand sheet mills or sheer mills in tandem. This method is now almost obsolete. (2) On modern, high speed continuous tandem cold reduction mills from coiled hot rolled pickled wide strip into ribbon wound coils to finished gage. Sizes range from 12" to 32" in width, and in thicknesses from 55 lbs. to 275 lbs. base box weight. It is used either as is for

A vertical shaft type smelting furnace in which an air blast is used, usually hot, for producing pig iron. The furnace is continuous in operation using iron ore, coke, and limestone as raw materials which are charged at the top while the molten iron and slag are collected at the bottom and are tapped out at intervals.

[See Tempered Spring Steel Strip.] ?BLUING -(1] Sheets-A method of coating sheets with a thin, even film of bluish-black oxide, obtained by exposure to an atmosphere of dry steam or air, at a temperature of about 1000 F, generally this is done during box- annealing. (2] Bluing of tempered spring steel strip; an oxide film blue in color produced by low temperature heating.

(Chemical Symbol B)- Element N. 5 of the periodic system. Atomic weight 10.82. It is gray in color, ignites at about 1112?F and burns with a brilliant green flame, but its melting point in a non-oxidizing atmosphere is about 4000?F Boron is used in steel in minute quantities for one purpose only-to increase the harden ability as in case hardening and to increase strength and hardness penetration.

A process of annealing a ferrous alloy in a suitable closed metal container, with or without packing materials, in order to minimize oxidation. The charger is usually heated slowly to a temperature below the transformation range, but sometimes above or within it, and is then cooled slowly. This process is also called "close annealing" or "pot annealing." See black annealing.

(Cartridge) Strip. 70% copper 30% zinc. This is one of the most widely used of the copper-zinc alloys; it is malleable and ductile; has excellent cold-working; poor hot working and poor machining properties; develops high tensile strength with cold-working. Temper is impaired by cold rolling and classified in hardness by the number of B&S Gages of rolling (reduction in thickness) from the previous annealing page. Rated excellent for soft-soldering; gold for silver alloy brazing or oxyacetylene welding and fair for resistance of carbon arc welding. Used for drawn cartridges, tubes, eyelet machine items, snap fasteners, etc.

Copper base alloys in which zinc is the principal added element. Brass is harder and stronger than either of its alloying elements copper or zinc; it is malleable and ductile; develops high tensile with cold-working and not heat treatable for purposes of hardness development.

Joining metals by fusion of nonferrous alloys that have melting points above 800?F. but lower then those of the metals being joined. This may be accomplished by means of torch (torch brazing), in a furnace (furnace brazing) or by dipping in a molten flux bath (dip or flux brazing). The filler metal is ordinary in rod form in torch brazing; whereas in furnace and dip brazing the word material is first assembled and the filler metal may then be applied as wire, washers, clips, bands, or may be integrally bonded, as in brazing sheet.

(For tempered steel.) A method of testing hardened and tempered high carbon spring steels strip wherein the specimen is held and bent across the grain in a vice-like calibrated testing machine. Pressure is applied until the metal fractures at which point a reading is taken and compared with a standard chart of brake limitations for various thickness range. (See Bond Test.)

The cold working of dead soft annealed strip metal immediately prior to forming, bending, or drawing operation. A process designed to prevent the formulation of Luder?s lines (Which see). Caution-Bridled metal should be used promptly and not permitted to (of itself) return to its pre-bridled condition.

A common standard method of measuring the hardness of certain metals. The smooth surface of the metal is subjected to indentation by a hardened steel ball under pressure or load. The diameter of the resultant indentation, in the metal surface, is measured by a special microscope and the Brinell hardness value read from a chart or calculated formula.

Primarily an alloy of copper and tin, but the name is now applied to other alloys not containing tin; e.g., aluminum bronze, manganese bronze, and beryllium bronze. For varieties and uses of tin bronze see (Alpha-bronze and Phosphor bronze).

A standard series of sizes arbitrarily indicated, as by numbers, to which the diameter of wire or thickness of sheet metal is usually made and which is used in the manufacture of brass, bronze, copper, copper-base alloys and aluminum. These gaga numbers have a definite relationship to each other. By this system the decimal thickness is reduced by 50% every six gage numbers-while temper is expressed by the number of B & S gage numbers as cold reduced in thickness from previous annealing. For each B & S gage number in thickness reduction, there is assigned a hardness value