Sae Ams 2759-5D-2014
Sae Ams 2759-5D-2014
Sae Ams 2759-5D-2014
D
AEROSPACE MATERIAL
SPECIFICATION Issued 1984-10
Revised 2004-06
Reaffirmed 2014-04
Superseding AMS2759/5C
Heat Treatment
Martensitic Corrosion-Resistant Steel Parts
RATIONALE
AMS2759/5D has been reaffirmed to comply with the SAE five-year review policy.
1. SCOPE:
This specification, in conjunction with the general requirements for steel heat treatment covered in
AMS 2759, establishes the requirements for heat treatment of martensitic corrosion-resistant steel
parts. Parts are defined in AMS 2759.
1.1 Application:
This specification is applicable to parts made from the following steels: Types 403, 410, 416, 420,
422, 431, 440C, and Greek Ascoloy (UNS S40300, S41000, S41600, S42000, S42200, S43100,
S44004, and S41800 respectively).
2. APPLICABLE DOCUMENTS:
The issue of the following documents in effect on the date of the purchase order forms a part of this
specification to the extent supplied herein. The supplier may work to a subsequent revision of a
document unless a specific document issue is specified. When the referenced document has been
cancelled and no superseding document has been specified, the last published issue of that document
shall apply.
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
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SAE INTERNATIONAL AMS2759/5D Page 2 of 11
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ASTM A 380 Cleaning and Descaling Stainless Steel Parts, Equipment, and Systems
3. TECHNICAL REQUIREMENTS:
3.2 Equipment:
Shall conform to AMS 2759. Furnace temperature uniformity requirements for annealing, subcritical
annealing, hardening, straightening, stress relieving, and baking shall be ±25 °F (±14 °C), and for
tempering shall be ±15 °F (±8 °C).
Parts shall be controlled by type (See 3.3.1), and heat treated in the class of atmosphere (See 3.3.2)
permitted in Table 1 for that type when heating above 1250 °F (677 °C). When heating parts at
1250 °F (677 °C) or below, Class A, B, or C atmosphere may be used (See 8.2).
3.3.1 Types of Parts: The heat treating processor shall determine the part type.
Type 1: Parts with 0.020-inch (0.5-mm) or more to be machined off all surfaces after heat
treatment and parts with as-forged, as-cast, or hot-finished mill surfaces at time of heat
treatment with all surfaces to be machined off. Unless informed that all surfaces will have
at least 0.020-inch (0.51-mm) machined off, the heat treating processor shall assume
parts will not be machined and shall control the part as Type 2, 3, or 4 as applicable.
Type 2: Forgings, castings, sheet, strip, plate, bar, rod, tubing, and extrusions with hot-finished
surfaces, at time of heat treatment, which will remain on the finished part.
Type 3: Parts with finished machined surfaces or surfaces with less than 0.020-inch (0.51-mm) to
be machined off any surface after heat treatment and parts with protective coating on all
surfaces.
Type 4: Parts that are partially machined with both unmachined, as-forged, as-cast, or
hot-finished mill surfaces and finished machined surfaces or machined surfaces with less
than 0.020-inch (0.51-mm) to be machined off after heat treatment.
3.3.1.1 If part type cannot be determined, the part shall be processed as Type 3.
3.3.3 Atmosphere: Atmosphere furnaces shall be controlled to ensure that the surfaces of heat treated
parts are within the limits specified in 3.5.1. Salt baths shall be tested in accordance with
AMS 2759.
3.3.3.1 Dew Point: Hydrogen and hydrogen-containing blends and atmospheres shall have a dew point
of -40 °F (-40 °C) or lower in or at the exit of the furnace working zone.
3.3.4 Protective Coatings: A supplemental coating or plating is permitted when approved by the
cognizant engineering organization (See 8.3).
3.4 Procedure:
3.4.1 Acid Cleaning: Parts, except for Type 1, shall be acid cleaned in accordance with ASTM A 380
before thermal treatment following forming with dies made from lead, kirksite, or other low-melting
temperature materials.
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3.4.2 Preheating: Preheating, until furnace stabilization in the 1200 to 1500 °F (649 to 816 °C) range, is
recommended before heating parts above 1500 °F (816 °C) if the parts have previously been heat
treated to a hardness greater than 35 HRC, have abrupt changes of section thickness, have sharp
reentrant angles, have finished machined surfaces, have been welded, have been cold formed or
straightened, have holes, or have sharp or only slightly rounded notches or corners.
3.4.3 Soaking: Heating shall be controlled, as described in AMS 2759, such that either the heating
medium or the part temperature, as applicable, is maintained at the set temperature in Table 2 or 3
for the soak time specified herein. Soaking shall commence when all control, indicating, and
recording thermocouples reach the specified set temperature or if load thermocouples, as defined
in AMS 2759, are used, when the part temperature reaches the minimum of the furnace uniformity
at the set temperature.
3.4.3.1 Parts with copper plated coated with reflective coatings which tend to reflect radiant heat shall
have their soak time increased by at least 50%, unless load thermocouples are used.
3.4.4 Annealing: Shall be accomplished by heating to the temperature shown in Table 2, soaking for the
time shown in Table 4, and cooling to below the temperature shown in Table 2 at the rate shown in
Table 2 followed by air cooling to ambient temperature. Isothermal annealing treatments may be
used providing equivalent hardness and microstructure are obtained. Isothermal annealing shall be
accomplished by heating to the annealing temperature shown in Table 2, soaking for the time
shown in Table 4, cooling to a temperature below the critical, holding for sufficient time to complete
transformation, and air cooling to ambient temperature.
3.4.5 Subcritical Annealing (Stress Relieving): Subcritical annealing or stress relieving prior to hardening
shall be accomplished by heating in the range 1350 to 1450 °F (732 to 788 °C), except 431 shall be
at 1150 to 1200 °F (621 to 649 °C) and 440C shall be at 1250 to 1350 °F (677 to 732 °C), soaking
for the time shown in Table 4, and cooling to ambient temperature.
3.4.6 Hardening (Austenitizing and Quenching): Shall be accomplished by heating to the austenitizing
temperature shown in Table 2, soaking for the time shown in Table 4, and quenching as shown in
Table 2. The parts shall be cooled to or below the quenchant temperature before tempering.
3.4.7 Tempering: Shall be accomplished by heating quenched parts to the temperature required to
produce the required properties. Suggested tempering temperatures for specific tensile strengths
for each alloy are shown in Table 3. Soaking time shall be not less than two hours plus one hour
additional for each inch (25-mm) of thickness or fraction thereof greater than one-inch (25-mm).
Thickness is defined in AMS 2759. When load thermocouples are used, the soaking time shall be
not less than one hour. Multiple tempering is permitted. When multiple tempering is used, parts
shall be cooled to ambient temperature (or below, if specified) between tempering treatments.
3.4.7.1 Parts may be snap tempered for two hours at 300 °F (149 °C). If the tempering temperature is
below 325 °F (163 °C) the snap temper shall be 25 °F (14 °C) degrees below the tempering
temperature.
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3.4.8 Straightening: When straightening of heat treated parts is authorized by the cognizant engineering
organization and the procedure is not specified, straightening shall be performed as follows:
3.4.8.1 Hardened Parts: Shall be straightened during or after the tempering operation.
3.4.8.2 Hardened and Tempered Parts: Shall be straightened at ambient temperature or at an elevated
temperature not exceeding 50 °F (28 °C) degrees below the tempering temperature. Ambient or
elevated temperature straightening shall be followed by stress relieving at a temperature 50 °F
(28 °C) degrees below the tempering temperature, unless otherwise specified. It is permissible to
retemper at a temperature not higher than the last tempering temperature after straightening
during tempering.
3.4.9 Post-Tempering Stress Relieving: When required by the cognizant engineering organization, parts
shall, after operations which follow hardening and tempering, be stress relieved by heating the
parts to 50 °F (28 °C) degrees below the tempering temperature and soaking for not less than one
hour plus one hour additional for each inch (25-mm) of thickness or fraction thereof greater than
one-inch (25-mm). When load thermocouples are used, the soaking time shall be not less than one
hour. Stress relief is prohibited on parts which have been peened or thread- or fillet-rolled after
hardening and tempering.
3.5 Properties:
Parts shall conform to the hardness specified by the cognizant engineering organization. If maximum
hardness is not specified for types 403 and 410 in the 180 to 200 ksi (1241 to 1379 MPa) tensile
strength range, hardness shall be 44 HRC maximum. For type 431 in the 180 to 200 ksi (1241 to
1379 MPa) tensile strength range, hardness shall be 47 HRC maximum.
3.5.1 Surface Contamination: Salt baths and the protective atmosphere and backfill medium in furnaces
for heating parts above 1250 °F (677 °C), when less than 0.020-inch (0.51-mm) of metal is to be
removed from any surface, shall be controlled to prevent carburization or nitriding and prevent
complete decarburization (See 3.5.1.1). Partial decarburization shall not exceed 0.005-inch
(0.13-mm). Intergranular oxidation shall not exceed 0.0007-inch (0.018-mm). Rejection criteria for
depth of decarburization shall be the microhardness reading at which there is more than a 20-point
Knoop, or equivalent, decrease in hardness from the core hardness. Rejection criteria for
carburization and nitriding shall be that the microhardness shall not exceed the core hardness by
20 points Knoop, or equivalent, at a depth of 0.003-inch (0.08-mm). Tests shall be in accordance
with 3.6.1. These requirements also apply to the cumulative effects of operations such as
austenitizing followed by reaustenitizing (See 3.5.1.4). For reheat treatments, the original
specimen or a portion thereof shall accompany the parts and be tested after reheat treatment.
3.5.1.1 Unless specifically informed that at least 0.020-inch (0.51-mm) will be removed from all surfaces
of parts, the heat treating processor shall heat treat the parts as if less than 0.020-inch (0.51-mm)
will be removed from some surfaces and, therefore, shall heat treat using controlled atmosphere
which will produce parts conforming to the surface contamination requirements.
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3.5.1.2 Parts that will be machined after heat treatment, but which will have less than 0.020-inch
(0.51-mm) of metal removed from any machined surface may be reclassified as Type 1, as
described in 3.3.1, and need not meet the requirements of 3.5.1 as heat treated, when it is
demonstrated by tests (See 3.6.1.1) on each load that all surface contamination exceeding the
requirements of 3.5.1 is removable from all machined surfaces, taking into account distortion
after heat treatment.
3.5.1.3 Furnaces used exclusively to heat treat parts which will have all contamination removed shall not
require testing.
3.5.1.4 The heat treating processor shall be responsible for determining whether cumulative heat
treating operations at their facility, as described in 3.5.1, have caused excessive surface
contamination.
3.6.1 Surface Contamination: Testing shall be by the microhardness method in accordance with
ARP1820 or an equivalent microhardness method that provides at least 3X increase in the
apparent thickness of the surface layer. Other microhardness methods may be used when
approved by the cognizant quality assurance organization and as approved in 3.6.1.1. Test
specimens shall be of the same alloy as the parts. Unless otherwise specified, test specimens shall
be in the as-quenched condition. In addition, the presence of total decarburization, carburization,
and nitriding shall be determined by etching with the appropriate etchant and examining at
approximately 250X magnification.
3.6.1.1 Testing for reclassification in 3.5.1.2 may be by any microhardness method if more than
0.002-inch (0.05-mm) is subsequently machined off all machined surfaces.
The responsibility for inspection, classification of tests, sampling, approval, entries, records, and
reports shall be in accordance with AMS 2759 and as specified in 4.1 and 4.2.
The classification of acceptance, periodic, and preproduction tests shall be as specified in AMS 2759
and as specified in 4.1.1 through 4.1.3.
4.1.1 Acceptance Tests: Surface contamination (3.5.1) for parts tempered below 700 °F (371 °C) is an
acceptance test and shall be performed on each lot. An alternate sampling plan in accordance with
4.2 may be used.
4.1.2 Periodic Tests: Surface contamination (3.5.1) is a periodic test and shall be performed monthly for
each furnace in service and for each kind of atmosphere to be used in each furnace.
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4.1.3 Preproduction Tests: Surface contamination (3.5.1) is a preproduction test and shall be performed
prior to any production heat treating for each furnace and for each kind of atmosphere to be used in
each furnace.
An alternative test plan to meet the requirements of 4.1.1 is permitted for heat treatment processes
verified by statistical process control (SPC) to be stable and capable.
4.2.1 A process is considered stable when statistical evaluation of the product and process parameters
show that all measured values fall within established control limits.
4.2.2 A process is considered capable when, after achieving and maintaining stability, all parts running to
the process have a minimum Cpk of 1.33 with a confidence level of 90 percent.
X – LSL
C pl = --------------------- (Eq. 1)
3σ
USL – X
C pu = ---------------------- (Eq. 2)
3σ
where:
X = process average
4.2.3.1 Statistical analysis of the heat treatment process parameters and the product test results of
properties (3.5) for control and capability.
4.2.3.2 Documentation of the critical process parameters and of the product test results of properties
(3.5) on a control plan. A change in these process parameters or product test results will require
review to determine if the process capability requires reverification.
4.2.3.3 Periodic auditing of the heat treatment process parameters and the product test results of
properties (3.5) to verify continued control and capability.
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4.2.3.4 Monthly, or whenever needed by either the cognizant engineering authority or process
constraints, decarburization shall be examined in accordance with 3.5.1.
6. ACKNOWLEDGMENT:
7. REJECTIONS:
8. NOTES:
8.1 A change bar (|) located in the left margin is for the convenience of the user in locating areas where
technical revisions, not editorial changes, have been made to the previous issue of a specification.
An (R) symbol to the left of the document title indicates a complete revision of the specification,
including technical revision. Change bars and (R) are not used in original publications, nor in
specifications that contain editorial changes only.
8.2 Heating below 1400 °F (760 °C) with Class B atmosphere containing 5% or more of hydrogen (H2),
carbon monoxide (CO), or methane (CH4), may result in explosion and fire.
8.3 When supplemental plating or coating, such as copper plate, is used, all atmosphere controls and
surface contamination tests are still required.
8.5 Dimensions and properties in inch/pound units are primary; dimensions and properties in SI units are
shown as the approximate equivalents of the primary units and are presented only for information.
1. Except for parts made from 431, cooling in air or other gases is permitted for parts under 0.25-inch
(6.4-mm) in maximum thickness provided they are not densely packed. Forced gas quenching is permitted
for parts up to 1-inch (25.4-mm) in maximum thickness.
2. Cool at a rate not to exceed 50 °F (28 °C) degrees per hour to below 1100 °F (593 °C) and air cool to
ambient temperature.
3. Austenitizing temperature of 1750 °F (954 °C) is permitted for thin sections to minimize warpage.
4. Cool at a rate not to exceed 50 °F (28 °C) degrees per hour to 1300 °F (704 °C), hold at 1300 °F
(704 °C) for 5 to 7 hours, cool at a rate not to exceed 50 °F (28 °C) degrees per hour to below 1000 °F
(538 °C), and air cool to ambient temperature.
5. Salt temperature shall be 375 to 525 °F (191 to 274 °C). Hold in salt for 10 to 15 minutes. Remove parts
and cool in air to ambient temperature.
6. Air cool to ambient temperature followed by heating to 1200 °F (649 °C) for 10 to 12 hours and air cooling.
7. After hardening quench, refrigerate at -90 °F (-68 °C) or lower for not less than two hours.
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1. Avoid tempering 403, 410, 416, and Greek Ascoloy in the range 700 to 1000 °F (371 to 538 °C) and 420, 422, and 431
in the range 700 to 1075 °F (371 to 579 °C). Tempering 403, 410, 416, and Greek Ascoloy in the range 1000 to 1150 °F
(538 to 621 °C) for 135 to 145 ksi (931 to 1000 MPa) minimum tensile strength is permitted when approved by the cognizant
engineering organization.
2. Absence of values indicates the respective steel is not recommended for the specified tensile strength range.
3. Recommended.
4. This strength level may not be obtainable at this temperature with parts made from material bought to some material
specifications.
5. Temper 420 at 300 °F (149 °C) for 52 HRC min, at 400 °F (204 °C) for 50 HRC min, and at 600 °F (316 °C) for
48 HRC minimum.
6. At least two tempers required. For parts requiring maximum dimensional stability over time, a subzero cool to
-90 °F (-68 °C) or lower for not less than two hours is recommended between the first and second temper.
7. Mandatory.
8. Temper 440C at 325 °F (163 °C) for 58 HRC min, at 375 °F (191 °C) for 57 HRC min, and at 450 °F (232 °C) for
55 HRC minimum.
9. 32 to 38 HRC.
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3. In all cases, the parts shall be held for sufficient time to ensure that the center of the most massive
area has reached temperature and the necessary transformation and diffusion have taken place.
4. Maximum soak time shall be twice the minimum specified, except for subcritical annealing.
5. Longer times may be necessary for parts with complex shapes or parts that do not heat uniformly.
6. Four hours plus 30 minutes for every 3 inches (76 mm) or portion thereof greater than 8 inches (203 mm).
7. Two hours plus 20 minutes for every 3 inches (76 mm) or portion thereof greater than 8 inches (203 mm).