R ryan2020 Member Messages 127 Location IE Dec 15, 2020 #1 Ive been reading on lathes.co.uk about harrison mills and the use gears that are heat treated to for example 85 tons, can someone explain what this means in lay mans terms? thanks
Ive been reading on lathes.co.uk about harrison mills and the use gears that are heat treated to for example 85 tons, can someone explain what this means in lay mans terms? thanks
T TechnicAl Banned Messages 8,981 Location Rotherham Dec 15, 2020 #2 https://www.bbshalmstad.se/en/infocenter/hardness-conversion-table
R ryan2020 Member Messages 127 Location IE Dec 15, 2020 #3 TechnicAl said: https://www.bbshalmstad.se/en/infocenter/hardness-conversion-table Click to expand... does t.s stand for tons? I figured it was hardness but ive never used them terms and ive done hardness tests regularly
TechnicAl said: https://www.bbshalmstad.se/en/infocenter/hardness-conversion-table Click to expand... does t.s stand for tons? I figured it was hardness but ive never used them terms and ive done hardness tests regularly
T TechnicAl Banned Messages 8,981 Location Rotherham Dec 15, 2020 #4 tensile strength..........now its in Newtons/ mm2 there will be a conversion to tons/ sq in somewhere on the net there is a correlation between tensile strength and hardness....its not 100% but its a good guide
tensile strength..........now its in Newtons/ mm2 there will be a conversion to tons/ sq in somewhere on the net there is a correlation between tensile strength and hardness....its not 100% but its a good guide
A Agroshield Member Messages 4,761 Dec 16, 2020 #5 Conversion chart you wanted: https://www.wallworkht.co.uk/content/hardness_conversion_charts/ or interactive: https://www.westyorkssteel.com/technical-information/steel-hardness-converter/ Rm is tensile strength.
Conversion chart you wanted: https://www.wallworkht.co.uk/content/hardness_conversion_charts/ or interactive: https://www.westyorkssteel.com/technical-information/steel-hardness-converter/ Rm is tensile strength.