US2373369A - Carburizing thin gauge armor plate - Google Patents

Carburizing thin gauge armor plate Download PDF

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US2373369A
US2373369A US446456A US44645642A US2373369A US 2373369 A US2373369 A US 2373369A US 446456 A US446456 A US 446456A US 44645642 A US44645642 A US 44645642A US 2373369 A US2373369 A US 2373369A
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carburizing
armor plate
plate
thin gauge
plates
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US446456A
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Albert L Abbott
Lester F Spencer
Lichtenstein Arthur
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Diebold Nixdorf Inc
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Diebold Inc
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    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C23COATING METALLIC MATERIAL; COATING MATERIAL WITH METALLIC MATERIAL; CHEMICAL SURFACE TREATMENT; DIFFUSION TREATMENT OF METALLIC MATERIAL; COATING BY VACUUM EVAPORATION, BY SPUTTERING, BY ION IMPLANTATION OR BY CHEMICAL VAPOUR DEPOSITION, IN GENERAL; INHIBITING CORROSION OF METALLIC MATERIAL OR INCRUSTATION IN GENERAL
    • C23CCOATING METALLIC MATERIAL; COATING MATERIAL WITH METALLIC MATERIAL; SURFACE TREATMENT OF METALLIC MATERIAL BY DIFFUSION INTO THE SURFACE, BY CHEMICAL CONVERSION OR SUBSTITUTION; COATING BY VACUUM EVAPORATION, BY SPUTTERING, BY ION IMPLANTATION OR BY CHEMICAL VAPOUR DEPOSITION, IN GENERAL
    • C23C8/00Solid state diffusion of only non-metal elements into metallic material surfaces; Chemical surface treatment of metallic material by reaction of the surface with a reactive gas, leaving reaction products of surface material in the coating, e.g. conversion coatings, passivation of metals
    • C23C8/60Solid state diffusion of only non-metal elements into metallic material surfaces; Chemical surface treatment of metallic material by reaction of the surface with a reactive gas, leaving reaction products of surface material in the coating, e.g. conversion coatings, passivation of metals using solids, e.g. powders, pastes
    • C23C8/62Solid state diffusion of only non-metal elements into metallic material surfaces; Chemical surface treatment of metallic material by reaction of the surface with a reactive gas, leaving reaction products of surface material in the coating, e.g. conversion coatings, passivation of metals using solids, e.g. powders, pastes only one element being applied
    • C23C8/64Carburising
    • C23C8/66Carburising of ferrous surfaces

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  • the invention relates to thin gau e armor plate, such as /1", /2, and up. to -1"" thick steel armor plate. and more; particularly 110:8: carburizing compound and method. for uniformly carburizing such armor plate...
  • the sizev of armor plate complicates the carburizing problem such that one authority has said that the average heat treater does not have to deal with so diflicult a. problem. as. securing the proper gradation of hardness and. toughness in pieces of the size of armor plate.
  • the prior art indicates thatwhen a large carburizing box is used, the material. in the center lags behind the indicated furnace temperature as much as several hundred degrees; that the greater the size of the box, the larger will be this error, and the. greaterthe actual difference in the thickness of case taken on by steel near the sides of the box as compared with that near the center ofthe' box: and thatthis condition can be remedied only by altering the dimensions of the box itself.
  • this compound required an. extremely careful and critical control. of: heating, such that the total. time. of carburization. was. some 52 or" more, hours, to bring the; material up to, heatv and. to; perform. the carburizing operation at about. 1700 F.
  • a carburizing compound for carburizing thin gauge armor plate with which a carburized case side may be provided on oneside only of thin gauge armor plate, of very uniform depth and gradient throughout the extent of plates of various sizes carburized in relatively large carburizing boxes.
  • the raw material used for the manufacture of. thin gauge armor plate is oarburizing alloy steel.
  • plates .as received from the steel mill,- of atype commonly used inthe manufacture of armor-plate, but in whichfthe percentage of alloying metals may be materially lowered from those percentages previously used in' order to conserve vital alloying metals such as chromium, nickel, molybdenum, vanadium and manganese. The plates are laid off and sheared or cut generally to size in accordance with specifications,-which size may be a matter of anumber of feet in length or breadth, or both, with the plate as thin as up to 1" in thickness.
  • This procedure usually renders it unnecessary to apply and remove an anti-carburizing material to the inner face or surface of each of the plates for preventing carburization thereat, and
  • carburizing boxes which may be as large as 96 inches in length and breadth, and up to about 32 inches in depth, or larger, and the plates are surrounded by a carburizing compound, the constitution of which comprises one of the principal features of the present invention.
  • the carburizing material in accordance with usual practice, may be used over and over with the addition of some new material, and the depth of the carburizing compound between plate layers when packed ordinarily ranges from 1 to 3". In packing the plates in the carburizing boxes, all edges of all plates are kept away from the sides of the box and from touching each other.
  • the box is covered with a lid and sealed with fire clay in the usual manner, and is then placed in a carburizing furnace, wherein the tempera-- ture is raised to from 1680 F. to 1720" F. furnace temperature as fast, as it is possible to do so.
  • the plates in the boxes are thus treated at the stated temperature in the carburizing furnace for a total furnace On to furnace off time of from 28 to 32 hours, usually about 28 hoursfor A" plate.
  • the sealed boxes are then removed from the carburizing furnace and are permitted to cool, whereupon the boxes are unpacked, the welds which are brittle are struck in order to separate the matched 0r paired plates.
  • the plates are then machined, or sheared, or bent or drilled to required size, shape and specification, following which the plates are heat treated to develop the required physical and ballistic properties in the hard case and softer backing sides.
  • a 19% to 24% carbon, carburizing alloy steel plate is normally used for making thin gauge armor plate, and in armor. plate of this gauge, it is usually desired to have the carbon content of the carburized side of slightly hyper-eutectoid composition at or near to the surface.
  • the curves of per cent carbon to case depth illustrate somewhat diagrammatically the approximate conditions desired in finished carburized heat treated armor plate made from 22% carbon base materiaL Normally it is desired to have a uniform depth of carbon penetration, which is gauged by a. visible line of demarcation between a fine silky grain structure of the case and a coarser grain structure of the core.
  • this line is at a place where the carbon content is approximately 35% to .40% carbon; and for fl armor plate it is normally desired to have this line'at a depth of about .065", indicated generally at B in curve I of the drawing. j
  • curves show diagrammatically the approximate desired finished conditions, curve I being for 54 thick armor plate and curve Ibeing for thick armor plate.
  • curve I A
  • the carbon gradient A-B in curve for armor plate is :re'lativelysteep from approximately the surface to the line of demarcation '13 between the fine and coarse grain structures, after which the gradient tapers off and merges into the ..-'22% carbon of the base.
  • the optimum desired characteristic *of thin gauge armor plate having a hard case side and a softer backing side is a plate having a carbon gradient in the carburized portion thereof substantially uniform throughout the length and breadth of the plate and substantially as shown in the drawing.
  • the improved carburizing compound may be made up in accordance with the following specifications, by volume:
  • the coke is preferably a by-productcoke of good structure with a maximum of 3% sulphur; and its size should be about 3 mesh with not more than passing through a 6 mesh screen.
  • the coke forms the major portion of the compound, and functions to transmit the furnace heat at a very fast rate into the interior of the large carburizing boxes so that there is only a very small lag in temperature, even though the carburizing box size is relatively large.
  • the large coke content of the carburizing compound is quite contrary to that of usuabmixtures of carburizing compounds of the prior art wherein coke has been used.
  • the coke also functions to maintain porosity in the packed boxes so as to permit free circulation of the carburizing gases evolved.
  • the size of the coke is important, because in the large boxes wherein a large number of relatively large sized pieces of armor plate are packed, the dead weight of the material being treated is considerable and the carburizing compound must be able to sustain the load'and yet leave passages for the circulation of carburizing gases.
  • the coke because of its strength and indicated size, also functions to' sustain the load and to leave passages for the circulation of carburizing gases close to the faces of the material being carburized without a compacting of the carburizing compound, which would reduce such circulation.
  • the charcoal is hardwood charcoal and its size should be about 53 mesh with notmore than 2.0% passing through :a 6 mesh screen.
  • thin gauge armor plate may be carburized in large boxes in a relatively short period of time to produce a case or carburized layer on one side of A" thick armor plate having a carbon content at or near to the surface of slightly hypereutectoid composition, and having approximately a 35% to .40% carbon content at a case depth of approximately .065 substantially uniformly throughout relatively large sized plates having a length or breadth, or both, as large as say inches.
  • carburizing compound may be used for carburizing plates heavier than A" thick within the range of up to 1" thick, thin gauge armor plate; but in carburizing heavier plates in this range, a somewhat longer time of treatment in the carburizing furnace will be employed in order to obtain.
  • the invention comprises a radical change in the composition of usual car-.
  • burizing compounds which materially simplifies and speeds up the manufacture of thin gauge armor plate and produces a more uniform thin gauge armor plate satisfying present day requirements.

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  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Chemical Kinetics & Catalysis (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Materials Engineering (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Metallurgy (AREA)
  • Organic Chemistry (AREA)
  • Solid-Phase Diffusion Into Metallic Material Surfaces (AREA)

Description

April 10, 1945. A. L. ABBOTT ET AL 2,373,359
, CARBURIZING THIN GAUGE ARMOR PLATE I Filed June 10, 1942 O O O Q Q grwqmow Alberi LFA bbotif Lester Spa/war amz Ari/mi Licklenatezzz 3 PERCENT C A RBON Patented Apr. 10, 1945 UNITED STATES PATENT QFFlCE v GARBURIZING THIN GAUGE ARMOR PLATE Albert. L. Abbott, Lester F. Spencer, and Arthur Lichtenstein... Canton, Ohio,, assignors to Die.- bold, Incorporated, a corporation of Ohio Application June 110., 1942, serial No. 446456 3. Claims. (or 1483193..
.The invention relates to thin gau e armor plate, such as /1", /2, and up. to -1"" thick steel armor plate. and more; particularly 110:8: carburizing compound and method. for uniformly carburizing such armor plate...
During the lastfew. years: there, has been an in.- creasev in the demand for thin gauge; steel armor plate having: a, h rd case. at one surface mer in into asofterbaokins at the. other surface. time over, there have been demands recently for tree.- mendous increases in the; ratev of production of i a e armor plate; for use n t e construction oflandl. Sea. or air... otlensive and defensiveweapons, equipment, materials. and armament without sacrifice. to; therequired physical and. ballistic, properties, or the unformi-ty oi the same. I
The development of uniform physical and ballistic properties by heat treatment; of carburized armor plate material. is ultimately dependent. upon, the uniformity of carburizing the hard or case side of. thearmor plate. A numberof complicating. conditions, arise in connection. with carburizing. lightv gauge armor plate, which do. not. arise. in the. art, of case. hardening other. common. articles. In. the. latter artv there is, a wealth of knowledge. and. experience; but it. has been said that each article. presents, its own. prob-.1 lem as to carburizing conditio s, and. that book recipes are of little avail in solving particular problems.
Initially, the sizev of armor plate complicates the carburizing problem such that one authority has said that the average heat treater does not have to deal with so diflicult a. problem. as. securing the proper gradation of hardness and. toughness in pieces of the size of armor plate.
Thus, the prior art. indicates thatwhen a large carburizing box is used, the material. in the center lags behind the indicated furnace temperature as much as several hundred degrees; that the greater the size of the box, the larger will be this error, and the. greaterthe actual difference in the thickness of case taken on by steel near the sides of the box as compared with that near the center ofthe' box: and thatthis condition can be remedied only by altering the dimensions of the box itself.
Unfortunately, the large sizes of armor plates desired or required, as to length or breadth, or both, do not permit this conditiorrto be remedied by altering the dimensions of the carhurizing box to: make them smaller so as to obtain more uniform carburization. V
Another complicating factor is the thinness of the armor plate, one surface and one surface only'of' which is to be carburi-zed because thin gauge material may warp.
Moreover, the conservation of vital raw materials has required a reduction in the percentages or alloying metals used in making carburizing steel plates for carburization; so that phases of the problem which might otherwise be satisfied by increasingthe percentages of certain alloying metals are in fact increased by the required; reduction in. the precentages of certain alloying metals; used. 1
In the general prior art ofi-carburizing, the usual solid carburizers are made up. essentially ot'hard' wood charcoal and barium carbonate; and these types of carburizingcompounds. have to a great. extent replaced earliertypes based principally on bone, or charred leather. with bone, or bone with charcoal. Sometimes small amounts of coke; aroused asa diluent.
A compound? containing ai'large amount. of charred bone, a smaller amount. of charcoal, with some barium carbonate as an energizer, and oil as a binder, was. somewhat satisfactorily used by us. for carburizing' thin gauge armor plate. However, this compound required an. extremely careful and critical control. of: heating, such that the total. time. of carburization. was. some 52 or" more, hours, to bring the; material up to, heatv and. to; perform. the carburizing operation at about. 1700 F.
prior carburizing. materialused by us for carburizing thin gauge armor plate. was sluggish. in operation, because it was in fact. a good heat, insulator and sometimes resulted in overcarburi zed edges. and under-carburized centers. This lack of uniformity of carburizing was kept at. a minimum by very careful and slow heating.
Attempts to speed up; the rate of heating with this. carburizing compound were not. practical, and alterations; in the. relative percentage of materials used in the compound were of no avail in reducing. the; overall time of carburizing.
because of the large. size of the boxes. required,v
and thetemp ra ur hea n la incidentv thereto.
We: havev discovered, however, by eliminating the. bone, and by-using a carburizing compound containing. a large percentage of coke, a smaller percentage of charcoal, an-energizer and a. binder, that itispossible to. reduce to. substantially onehalf, the. total time required for carburizins' and yet obtain a uniformcarburized depth having. the desired gradient. throughout; in thin auge; armor. plate so carburized; while at. the same time. utilizing carburizing, steel. plate raw 2 material containing smaller amounts of alloying metals than were heretofore used.
These new results accordingly assist in conserving raw materials, speed up production bysubstantially decrease the time requiredfor car burizing thin gauge armor plate.
Also it is an object of the present invention to provide a carburizing compound for carburizing thin gauge armor plate with which a carburized case side may be provided on oneside only of thin gauge armor plate, of very uniform depth and gradient throughout the extent of plates of various sizes carburized in relatively large carburizing boxes.
Also it is an object of the present invention to provide a new carburizing compound for uniformly carburizing one side only of very thin gauge material of relatively great length or breadth, or both.
And finally, it is an object of the present invention to provide a carburizing compound for carburizing thin'gauge steel armor plate which avoids prior dimculties and enables the speedy production of armor plate having uniform high ballistic properties.
These and other objects may be obtained by the methods, procedures, steps, operations and compounds hereinafter described in detail, and set forth in the appended claims.
In the drawing; the .figure illustrates somewhat diagrammatically the carbon gradient desired in the case side of thin gauge armor plate.
The raw material used for the manufacture of. thin gauge armor plate is oarburizing alloy steel. plates .as received from the steel mill,- of atype commonly used inthe manufacture of armor-plate, but in whichfthe percentage of alloying metals may be materially lowered from those percentages previously used in' order to conserve vital alloying metals such as chromium, nickel, molybdenum, vanadium and manganese. =The plates are laid off and sheared or cut generally to size in accordance with specifications,-which size may be a matter of anumber of feet in length or breadth, or both, with the plate as thin as up to 1" in thickness.
Because extremely large quantities of A," armor plate are used, and because the manufacture of A," armor plate perhaps presents a greater problem than any other gauge in the range of 21" to 1" thick thin gauge armor plate,
the invention will be described in detail with particular reference to A" thin gauge armor plate.
No holes are drilled in the plates which have been cut generally to size, but two matched plates are placed face to face, and the edges of the plates are welded together completely around the periphery thereof so as to completely seal off the inside or contacting faces or surfaces of the matched plates and to leave only one face or surface of each plate exposed.
This procedure usually renders it unnecessary to apply and remove an anti-carburizing material to the inner face or surface of each of the plates for preventing carburization thereat, and
thereby reduces the cost of production of light gauge armor plate, which is face hardened on one side only.
After matched plates have been welded together, they are packed in carburizing boxes which may be as large as 96 inches in length and breadth, and up to about 32 inches in depth, or larger, and the plates are surrounded by a carburizing compound, the constitution of which comprises one of the principal features of the present invention.
The carburizing material, in accordance with usual practice, may be used over and over with the addition of some new material, and the depth of the carburizing compound between plate layers when packed ordinarily ranges from 1 to 3". In packing the plates in the carburizing boxes, all edges of all plates are kept away from the sides of the box and from touching each other.
The box is covered with a lid and sealed with fire clay in the usual manner, and is then placed in a carburizing furnace, wherein the tempera-- ture is raised to from 1680 F. to 1720" F. furnace temperature as fast, as it is possible to do so. The plates in the boxes are thus treated at the stated temperature in the carburizing furnace for a total furnace On to furnace off time of from 28 to 32 hours, usually about 28 hoursfor A" plate.
Small variations in the furnace time and tem perature are determined by the depth of case desired; the hardness'desired; the ballistic properties to be developed; the steel analysis; and the grain size; and these matters are known in the art of carburizing where small variations are ordinarily left largely up to the skill of the operator.
The sealed boxes are then removed from the carburizing furnace and are permitted to cool, whereupon the boxes are unpacked, the welds which are brittle are struck in order to separate the matched 0r paired plates. The plates are then machined, or sheared, or bent or drilled to required size, shape and specification, following which the plates are heat treated to develop the required physical and ballistic properties in the hard case and softer backing sides.
Referring more particularly to the drawing, a 19% to 24% carbon, carburizing alloy steel plate is normally used for making thin gauge armor plate, and in armor. plate of this gauge, it is usually desired to have the carbon content of the carburized side of slightly hyper-eutectoid composition at or near to the surface. The curves of per cent carbon to case depth illustrate somewhat diagrammatically the approximate conditions desired in finished carburized heat treated armor plate made from 22% carbon base materiaL Normally it is desired to have a uniform depth of carbon penetration, which is gauged by a. visible line of demarcation between a fine silky grain structure of the case and a coarser grain structure of the core. Normally this line is at a place where the carbon content is approximately 35% to .40% carbon; and for fl armor plate it is normally desired to have this line'at a depth of about .065", indicated generally at B in curve I of the drawing. j
The curves, as stated, show diagrammatically the approximate desired finished conditions, curve I being for 54 thick armor plate and curve Ibeing for thick armor plate. In curve I, A
mars es :indioatesthe desired slightly hyper-eutectoid cates the location .of :the visible line. between fine and coarse grain structures where'the carbon content is approximately 35% to 440% carbon at a desired depth of about for armor plate. 1
the carbon gradient A-B in curve for armor plate is :re'lativelysteep from approximately the surface to the line of demarcation '13 between the fine and coarse grain structures, after which the gradient tapers off and merges into the ..-'22% carbon of the base.
The optimum desired characteristic *of thin gauge armor plate having a hard case side and a softer backing side is a plate having a carbon gradient in the carburized portion thereof substantially uniform throughout the length and breadth of the plate and substantially as shown in the drawing.
We have been ableffoy using the improved carburizing compound now to be specifically described, to provide such uniform carburized conditions in thin gauge armor plate. At the same time we have materially decreased the time required for carburizing, thus enabling increased production.
The improved carburizing compound may be made up in accordance with the following specifications, by volume:
Per cent By-product coke 50 to 58 Hardwood charcoal 28 to 38 Barium carbonate 4 to 5 Calcium carbonate 1 to 2 Strap molasses or other suitable binder 6 The coke is preferably a by-productcoke of good structure with a maximum of 3% sulphur; and its size should be about 3 mesh with not more than passing through a 6 mesh screen. The coke forms the major portion of the compound, and functions to transmit the furnace heat at a very fast rate into the interior of the large carburizing boxes so that there is only a very small lag in temperature, even though the carburizing box size is relatively large. The large coke content of the carburizing compound is quite contrary to that of usuabmixtures of carburizing compounds of the prior art wherein coke has been used.
The coke also functions to maintain porosity in the packed boxes so as to permit free circulation of the carburizing gases evolved. In this connection, the size of the coke is important, because in the large boxes wherein a large number of relatively large sized pieces of armor plate are packed, the dead weight of the material being treated is considerable and the carburizing compound must be able to sustain the load'and yet leave passages for the circulation of carburizing gases. Thus, the coke, because of its strength and indicated size, also functions to' sustain the load and to leave passages for the circulation of carburizing gases close to the faces of the material being carburized without a compacting of the carburizing compound, which would reduce such circulation.
The charcoal is hardwood charcoal and its size should be about 53 mesh with notmore than 2.0% passing through :a 6 mesh screen.
ithe Eba'rium' carbonate and calcium carbonate :a'ctiin a somewhat typical manner :as the energizersior catalyzers so that, :00 gas :gives up roarrbon at aaslow, seven enth-controlled :rate to the metal to'be carburized anliso that the carbon at the surface is not too high, but is absorbed and migrates. so :as to produce the somewhat typical :grcadienzts shown in the drawing. The energizer content (of the "improved compound is somewhat lower than that usually used in the prior :art. Even :so, :with the improved compound, we. obtain uniform results and materially reduce the oarburi'zing time in carburi'zing thin gauge armor plate. A 1 1 I Therehave been a number-of heories as to the mechanism of carburizati'on, and it is be'lieved mmecessary to explainherein what we believe to be the proper theory as to the action of the #ener- ,gizer and the charcoal and the chemical reactions which take place. We may, however, state that we :belieye that the 'bulkof the CO gas, which gives up carbon 'to the metal, comes from the charcoal; and we believe that a slight amount :of effective CO gas is produced by the energizer, and also by the coke.
Regardless'of the explanation of the mechanism of carburization, we have found that by using the carburizing compound just described, thin gauge armor plate may be carburized in large boxes in a relatively short period of time to produce a case or carburized layer on one side of A" thick armor plate having a carbon content at or near to the surface of slightly hypereutectoid composition, and having approximately a 35% to .40% carbon content at a case depth of approximately .065 substantially uniformly throughout relatively large sized plates having a length or breadth, or both, as large as say inches.
The same carburizing compound may be used for carburizing plates heavier than A" thick within the range of up to 1" thick, thin gauge armor plate; but in carburizing heavier plates in this range, a somewhat longer time of treatment in the carburizing furnace will be employed in order to obtain. a thicker carburized layer having a slightly less steep carbon gradient curve .as indicated by curve 2 in the drawing for finished armor plate. i
In its broadest aspects, the invention comprises a radical change in the composition of usual car-.
burizing compounds, which materially simplifies and speeds up the manufacture of thin gauge armor plate and produces a more uniform thin gauge armor plate satisfying present day requirements.
Moreover, the welding of plate pairs together, entirely around the periphery, enables carburization on one side only of each plate usually without the application or removal of an antioarburizing material; which is also a radical of /1." thick armor plate, because armor plate of substantially any thickness in the thinner gauges up to approximately 1" in thickness, may be processed in accordance with the described invention, without departing from the scope of the invention.
"Having now described the features of the invention, the preferred steps used in carburizing thin gauge armorplate, the improved carburizing compound used, and the advantages and results obtained thereby; the new and useful methods,
method steps, operations and compounds are set forth in the appended claims.
We claim: g
1. In the manufacture of uniformly carburized steel armor plate of the thinner gaugesof the order .of up to 1" in thickness having a hard case side and' a softer backing side, the steps of welding the edges of paired plates together entirely around the periphery thereof; packing the paired Welded plates in large curburizing boxes, with a carburizing compound containing a major portion of ,coke by volume, and the. balance charcoal, an energizer and a binder; andthen heatingthe same at about 1680 F. to 1720 F. to, uniformly carburize the outer face of each plate of each pair.
around the periphery thereof; packing th paired welded plates in large curburizing boxes with a carburizing compound containing by volume 50% to 58% coke, 28% to 38% charcoal, a small amount of an energizer, and a binder; and then heating the same at about 1680 F.to 1720 F. to uniformly carburize the outer face of each plate of each pair. I
3. In the manufacture of uniformly carburized steel armor plate having a hard case side and a softer backing side, the steps of welding the edges of paired plates together entirely around the periphery thereof; packing the paired welded plates in large carburizing boxes with a carburizing compoundcontaining approximately by .volume 50% to 58% coke, 28 to 38% charcoal, 4% to 5 barium carbonate, 1 /2 21 to 2 calcium carbonate and 6% a binder; and then heating the same at about 1680 F. to 1720 F. for about 28 to 32 hours'to uniformly carburize the outer face of each plate of each pair.
ALBERT L. ,ABBOTI. LESTER F. SPENCER. ARTHUR LICHTENSTEIN.
US446456A 1942-06-10 1942-06-10 Carburizing thin gauge armor plate Expired - Lifetime US2373369A (en)

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Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2444724A (en) * 1944-09-19 1948-07-06 Chicago Pneumatic Tool Co Bearing for rock bits

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2444724A (en) * 1944-09-19 1948-07-06 Chicago Pneumatic Tool Co Bearing for rock bits

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