US2035394A - Cast steel - Google Patents

Cast steel Download PDF

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Publication number
US2035394A
US2035394A US710524A US71052434A US2035394A US 2035394 A US2035394 A US 2035394A US 710524 A US710524 A US 710524A US 71052434 A US71052434 A US 71052434A US 2035394 A US2035394 A US 2035394A
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United States
Prior art keywords
steel
metal
copper
cast steel
welding
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Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
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US710524A
Inventor
Russell H Mccarroll
Vennerholm Gosta
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Ford Motor Co
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Ford Motor Co
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Filing date
Publication date
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Priority to US710524A priority Critical patent/US2035394A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2035394A publication Critical patent/US2035394A/en
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Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

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Classifications

    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C22METALLURGY; FERROUS OR NON-FERROUS ALLOYS; TREATMENT OF ALLOYS OR NON-FERROUS METALS
    • C22CALLOYS
    • C22C38/00Ferrous alloys, e.g. steel alloys
    • C22C38/16Ferrous alloys, e.g. steel alloys containing copper

Definitions

  • This invention relates to a new and improved steel alloy having new and exceptional properties and capable of being employed for the casting of many articles of manufacture for which no known 5 alloys or metals could be satisfactorily employed.
  • the present invention has for its principal object to provide a new and improved steel alloy capable of being successfully cast to form thin walled castings and withstanding the high temperatures of welding operations without hardening effect or embrittlement and which, moreover, can be manufactured and fabricated at a relatively low cost.
  • the relatively high silicon content together with the copper results in increased fluidity which enables very thin wall castings to be satisfactorily 10 produced.
  • the silicon or copper contents in properly combined proportions give a lower melting point whichtends to improve the welding properties of the metal. It is found that the silicon and copper go into solid solution with the iron to produce an alloy havingexcellent high physical properties; the high silicon content being important in this respect as it tends to increase the solubility of the copper, the metal having a tensile strength of from 85 to 90 thousand pounds per 20,
  • the metal may be cast in green sand molds thus enabling savings to be efiected in production costs. After casting an ordinary normalizing treatment is desirable, such normalizing resulting v 5 in a decided improvement in the physical proper- A ties by producing a marked grainrefinement of the metal.
  • the copper content is relatively small, and the production cost 40 of the metal is appreciably lower than that of either cast steel or ordinary malleable iron and possesses marked advantages over either in that it may be used for producing excellent thin wall castings, to-which other parts may be integrally secured by welding; a strong welded joint being secured without producing any deterioration of the physical properties of the metal.
  • An article of manufacture comprising a RUSSELL H; McCARROIL. 15 sound thin wall casting of low carbon, high silicon GOSTA VENNERHOIM. 15

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  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Materials Engineering (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Metallurgy (AREA)
  • Organic Chemistry (AREA)
  • Continuous Casting (AREA)

Description

Patented Mar. 24, 1936 UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICEI' 2,035,394 cAs'r STEEL Russell H. McCarroll and Gosta Vennerholm,
Dear-born, Mich., assignors to Ford Motor Company, Dearborn, Mich;
WIN
a corporation of Dela- No-Drawing. Application February 9, i934, Serial No. '10,524
2 Claims. (oi. 75-125 This invention relates to a new and improved steel alloy having new and exceptional properties and capable of being employed for the casting of many articles of manufacture for which no known 5 alloys or metals could be satisfactorily employed.
1 5' intricate castings due to lack of suflicient fluidity.
Also because of the greater cost of making an ordinary steel casting of such a design it would be prohibitive, if in fact it were possible to secure sound castings in ordinary steel of such a design. so Malleable iron is especially well adapted for thin castings but cannot be welded satisfactorily because of its tendency to harden and become brittle under the high heats of the welding operation which are above the critical temperature and 25 because of the tendency of the free temper carbon content to oxidize and form gases which produce blow holes and thereby weaken the weld. Ordinary grey cast'iron could' not be successfully employed for articles of the type under consider- 30 ation because of its relatively low physical properties and'because-hlghcar'bon content thereof results in marked hardening and embrittlement of the metal in the region of the weld after welding.
35 The present invention has for its principal object to provide a new and improved steel alloy capable of being successfully cast to form thin walled castings and withstanding the high temperatures of welding operations without hardening effect or embrittlement and which, moreover, can be manufactured and fabricated at a relatively low cost.
We have found after considerable experimenta- 45 tion that a steel having an analysis falling within the following limits, will have all of the desired properties and none of the objectionable features T as above set forth, of the more commonly used materials:
0.25% (maximum) Mn 0.15 to 0.65% 7 Si [452.15% to 1.2 Cu L 0.90 toii'i5% 1 5 Fe... balance If desired sulphur up to 0.15 may be added for increasing ease of machineability.
It has been found that the presence of more than 0.25 C. results in a hardening and embrittlement of the metal in the region of the weld 5 after the metal is subjected to the high welding temperatures. I
The relatively high silicon content together with the copper results in increased fluidity which enables very thin wall castings to be satisfactorily 10 produced. The silicon or copper contents in properly combined proportions give a lower melting point whichtends to improve the welding properties of the metal. It is found that the silicon and copper go into solid solution with the iron to produce an alloy havingexcellent high physical properties; the high silicon content being important in this respect as it tends to increase the solubility of the copper, the metal having a tensile strength of from 85 to 90 thousand pounds per 20,
square inch and a Brinnell hardness of about 150. While the silicon content should be kept high enough to secure the desired fluidity, it has been found to be best not to have an amount in excess of 1.25%, because of its effect onmachineability 5 especially in combination with a relatively high copper content, o I
It has also been found advisable not to have the copper content greater than 1.75%, thereby to avoid the tendency towards excessive air harden- The metal may be cast in green sand molds thus enabling savings to be efiected in production costs. After casting an ordinary normalizing treatment is desirable, such normalizing resulting v 5 in a decided improvement in the physical proper- A ties by producing a marked grainrefinement of the metal.
. Although copper is employed the copper content is relatively small, and the production cost 40 of the metal is appreciably lower than that of either cast steel or ordinary malleable iron and possesses marked advantages over either in that it may be used for producing excellent thin wall castings, to-which other parts may be integrally secured by welding; a strong welded joint being secured without producing any deterioration of the physical properties of the metal.
Although the invention has been described from the standpoint of its-advantages when used r for the manufacture of thin wall castings, to
- which it is desired'to weld other parts, it will be understood that the invention is not to be con- Y sidered as limited to this one specific use, but that as other uses will be readily apparent to the 5g skilled metaliurgist and those in the art to which steel capable of withstanding welding temperathe invention appertains, it is the purpose to intures without deterioration or air hardening efclude herein such other uses. Iects, said steel having an analysis lying between We claim: a the following limits:
5 1. An article of manufacture a sound thin wall 5 1 casting of low carbon, high silicon steel and hav- C 025% (maximum) ing an anal 1 1 1 withi m r 11 1 11 it 055% Y3 S y Hg 11 e 0 0W 8 m S1 0 75 t 1 25% C 0.25% (maximum) (:11 0.90 to 1.75% Mn 0.15 to 0.65% Fe balance s1 0.75 to 1.25%
Cu 030 to 135% and 1: 1 wii ch th sil n a d g 2 55 1 com ne n approx ma e y e prop r ns 0 Balance substantially all iron. to 5 respectively.
2. An article of manufacture comprising a RUSSELL H; McCARROIL. 15 sound thin wall casting of low carbon, high silicon GOSTA VENNERHOIM. 15
US710524A 1934-02-09 1934-02-09 Cast steel Expired - Lifetime US2035394A (en)

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Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP3330397A4 (en) * 2015-07-30 2019-04-17 Kabushiki Kaisha Riken Cast steel material

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP3330397A4 (en) * 2015-07-30 2019-04-17 Kabushiki Kaisha Riken Cast steel material

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