1
The other term of precipitation
hardening is:
Age hardening
2
It occurs in some metals, notably certain
stainless steel, aluminum, and copper alloys
at ambient temperature after solution heat
treatment, the process being one of a
constituent precipitating from solid solution.
Where used, the consequences include
increased strength and hardness, decrease
ductility.
Age hardening
3
The aging at moderately elevated
temperature expedites the process and
is called:
Artificial Aging
4
A substance with metallic properties,
compound of two or more elements of
which at least one is metal.
Alloy
5
In steel are usually considered to be
the metallic elements added for the
purpose of modifying the properties.
Alloying elements
6
It is the characteristics of exhibiting
different properties when tested in
different directions (as tensile strength
“with grain” or “across the grain”).
Anisotropy
7
It is a tendency to fracture without
appreciable deformation.
Brittleness
8
It is one in which specimen, supported
at both ends as a simple beam, is
broken by the impact of a falling
pendulum. The energy absorbed in
breaking the specimen is a measure of
the impact strength of the metal.
Charpy Test
9
It is the brittleness of metals at ordinary
or low temperatures.
Cold Shortness
10
It is the process of deforming a metal
plastically at a temperature below the
recrystallization temperature and at a
rate to produce strain hardening.
Cold Working
11
Steel that is frequently used because it
increases strength and machinability,
and improves surface finish.
Cold-drawn Steel
12
Commercial amounts of cold working of
steel are of the order of :
10 to 20 %
13
It is the ability of a material to absorb or
damp vibrations, which is a process of
absorbing kinetic energy of vibration
owing to hysteresis. The absorbed
energy is eventually dissipated to the
surroundings as heat.
Damping Capacity
14
It is a loss of carbon from the surface of
steel, occurring during hot rolling,
forging, and heat treating, when
surrounding medium reacts with the
carbon (as oxygen and carbon
combining).
Decarburization
15
It is the property that permits
permanent deformation before fracture
in tension.
Ductility
16
The percent elongation for ductile
materials.
Greater than 5% in
2-in. gage
17
The percent elongation in brittle
materials.
Less than 5% in
2-in. gage
18
It is the ability of a material to be
deformed and to return to the original
shape.
Elasticity
19
It involves the loss of ductility because
of a physical or chemical change of the
material.
Embrittlement
20
It is the part of the carbon content of
steel or iron that is in the form of
graphite or temper carbon.
Free Carbon
21
It is a temper produced in wire, rod, or
tube by cold drawing.
Hard drawn
22
Materials that have the same structure
at all points.
Homogeneous materials
23
Materials that have the same properties
in all directions.
Isotropic
24
A test in which specimen, supported at
one end as a cantilever beam, is
broken by the impact of a falling
pendulum. The energy absorbed in
breaking the specimen is a measure of
the impact strength.
Izod Test
25
A steel that has been deoxidized with a
strong deoxidizing agent such as silicon
or aluminum, in order to eliminate a
reaction between the carbon and
oxygen during solidification.
Killed Steel
26
It is somewhat indefinite property that
refers to the relative ease with which a
material can be cut.
Machinability
27
The material’s susceptibility to extreme
deformation in rolling or hammering.
Malleability
28
Are those that have to do with stress
and strain: ultimate strength and
percent elongation.
Mechanical properties
29
It is the extension in the vicinity of the
fracture of a tensile specimen,
expressed as a percentage of the
original gage length as 20% in 2 in.
Percent elongation
30
It is the smallest area at the point of
rupture of a tensile specimen divided by
the original area.
Percent reduction of area
31
It exclude mechanical properties, and
are other physical properties such as
density, conductivity, coefficient of
thermal expansion.
Physical properties
32
It is the ability of the metal to be
deformed considerably without rupture.
In this deformation the material does
not return to its original shape.
Plasticity
33
It is the ratio of lateral strain
(contraction) to the longitudinal strain
(extension) when the element is loaded
with a longitudinal force.
Poission’s ratio
34
It is the stress which causes a specified
permanent deformation of material
usually 0.01% or less.
Proof stress
35
It is a brittleness in steel when it is red
hot.
Red shortness
36
It is associated with creep and
decreasing stress at a constant strain;
important for metals in high
temperature service.
Relaxation
37
Are those not due to applied loads or
temperature gradients; they exists for
various reasons, as unequal cooling
rates, cold working etc.
Residual Stresses
38
It is incompletely deoxidized steel.
Ingots of this steel have a surface layer
quite free of slag inclusions and gas
pockets, which results in the optimum
surface on rolled sheets.
Rimmed steel
39
It is the process of holding an alloy at
suitably high temperature long enough
to permit one or more constituents to
pass into solid solution and then
cooling fast enough to hold the
constituents as a supersaturated
solution.
Solution heat treatment
40
It is the ability to resist deformation. It is
measured by the modulus of elasticity
in the elastic range; the higher the
modulus, the stiffer is the material.
Stiffness
41
It is increasing the hardness and
strength by plastic deformation at
temperatures lower than the
recrystallization range.
Strain Hardening
42
It is condition produced in a non-ferrous
metal by mechanical or thermal
treatment; for example, annealed
temper (soft), hard temper, and spring
temper.
Temper
43
It is the capacity of material to
withstand a shock load without
breaking.
Toughness
44
It refers to the results of a transverse
bend test, the specimen being mounted
as a simple beam.
Transverse Strength
45
The other term for transverse strength
and frequently applied to brittle
materials, especially cast iron.
Rupture Modulus
46
The other term same as strain
hardening.
Work Hardening
47
It is the steel that has been hammered,
rolled, or drawn in the process of
manufacture; it may be plain carbon or
alloy steel.
Wrought Steel
48
It is an operation or combination of
operations involving the heating and
cooling of metal or an alloy in the solid
state for the purpose of altering the
properties of the material.
Heat
Treatment
49
It is a change in a metal by which its
structure recovers from an unstable or
metastable condition that has been
produced by quenching or cold
working.
Aging or Age Hardening
50
A comprehensive term, is a heating and
slow cooling of a solid metal usually
done to soften it.
Annealing
51
Other purposes of Annealing include
those:
Altering the mechanical and
physical properties
Producing a particular
microstructure, removing internal
stresses (Stress relieving) and
removing gases
52
The same meaning as the
Transformation Range.
Critical Range
53
It is often used to mean tempering, but
this usage conflicts with the meaning of
the drawing of a material through a die
and is to be avoided.
Drawing
54
It causes the combined carbon to
transform wholly or on part into
graphitic or free carbon; it is applied to
cast iron, sometimes to high-carbon
steel.
Graphitizing
55
It is the heating of certain steels above
the transformation range then
quenching, for the purpose of
increasing the hardness.
Hardening
56
It is an annealing process whereby
combined carbon in white cast iron is
transformed wholly or on part to temper
carbon.
Malleablizing
57
It is the heating of an iron-base alloy to
some 100 deg. F above the
transformation range with subsequent
cooling to below that range in still air at
room temperature. The purpose is to
produce uniform structure.
Normalizing
58
It is any heating and cooling of steel that
produces a rounded or globular form of
carbide. Typically, it is prolonged heating at
a temperature slightly below the
transformation range usually followed by
slow cooling; or for small objects of high
carbon steel, it may be prolonged heating
alternately within and slightly below the
transformation range.
Spheroidizing
59
It is the heating of a metal body to a
suitable temperature (generally just
below the transformation range for
steel, say 1100-1200 deg. F) and
holding it at that temperature for
suitable time (1 to 3 hrs for steel) for
the purpose of reducing internal
residual stresses.
Stress Relieving
60
It is reheating of hardened or
normalized steel to a temperature
below the transformation range,
followed by any desired rate of cooling.
Tempering
61
For ferrous metals, it is the temperature
interval during which austenite is
formed during heating; it is also the
temperature interval during which
austenite disappears during cooling.
Thus, there are two ranges; these may
overlap but never coincide. The range
on heating is higher than cooling.
Transformation Range
62
It is the measure of the material’s
resistance to indentation.
Hardness
63
The common instruments used to
determine hardness:
Brinell
Rockwell
Vickers
Shore Scleroscope
64
The tester faster than Brinell and is
widely used commercially. It utilizes
several different indenters and, in
effect, measures what?
depth of the penetration
by the indenter
65
What are the different indenters of Rockwell
tester?
Rockwell B 1/16 “ ball 100 kg Medium soft Copper
(RB) metals alloys
Soft steels
Rockwell C Diamond 150 kg Hard metals Hard as
(RC) indenter steel
Rockwell A Diamond 60 kg Extremely Tungsten
(RA) indenter hard metals carbide
Rockwell D Diamond 100 kg Case
(RD) indenter Hardened
metal
Rockwell E 1/8 in ball 100 kg Soft metals Bearing
(RE) metals
magnesium
66
A tester that has a square-base,
diamond pyramid indenter whose
number is the load in kilograms divided
by the impressed area in square
millimeters.
Vicker Tester
67
A tester in which the number is
obtained by letting a freely falling
hammer with a diamond point strike the
object to be tested and measuring the
height of rebound.
Shore Scleroscope
68
The term used for hardness of perhaps
600 Brinell.
Hard File
69
The meaning of ASTM.
American Society of
Testing Materials
70
The specifications of SAE means what?
American Society of
Automotive Engineers
71
Used for tubings, forgings, pressed-
steel parts, screws, rivets, and for
carburized case-hardened parts.
Carbon, 10-20 points
(10XX groups)
72
The specifications of AISI mean what?
American Iron and
Steel Institute
73
1XXX Plain carbon
11XX Plain carbon steel with greater sulfur
content for free cutting
2XXX Nickel steel
SAE 1030 or 0.30% carbon or 30 points carbon
AISI 1030
SAE 10XX Plain carbon
SAE 11XX Free cutting
SAE 13XX Manganese
SAE 14XX Boron
SAE 2XXX Nickel
SAE 3XXX Nickel-chromium
SAE 303XX Heat and Corrosion Resistant
74
SAE 4XXX Molybdenum
SAE 41XX Molybdenum-chromium
SAE 46XX Molybdenum-nickel
SAE 47XX Molybdenum-chromium-nickel
SAE 48XX Molybdenum-nickel
SAE 5XXX Chromium
SAE 514XX Heat and corrosion resistant
SAE 515XX Heat and corrosion resistant
SAE 6XXX Chromium-vanadium
SAE 8XXX Nickel-chromium-molybdenum
SAE 92XX Silicon-manganese
SAE 9XXX Nickel-chromium-molybdenum (except
92XX)
75
Due to higher sulfur content in certain
grades, it is free-cutting and food for
use of in automatic screw machines for
miscellaneous parts including screws; it
may also be carburized.
Carbon, 10-20 points
(11XX)
76
General purpose grades, used for
forged and machined parts, screws;
also for boiler plate and structural steel.
Carbon, 20-30 points
77
With 0.40-0.50% C, frequently used for
miscellaneous forged machined parts;
shafts. Frequently heat treated for
improved mechanical properties. Cold
finish for shafting and similar parts?
Carbon, 30-55 points
78
Maybe hardened to a good cutting
edge, especially in the higher ranges of
carbon therefore, used for tools. Also
for springs. High strength, low ductility.
Nearly always heat treated, say, to a
Brinell hardness of 375 or higher.
Carbon 60-95 points
79
A steel that contains significant
quantities of recognized alloying
metals.
Wrought iron
80
Used to improve the hardenability of
steel, to reduce distortion from heat
treatment, to increase toughness,
ductility, and tensile strength, and to
improve low-temperature or high
temperature properties.
Alloys
81
An efficient deoxidizer, an alloy in
nitriding steels (nitrialloys), and it
promotes fine grain size.
Aluminum
82
In very small amounts (0.001% or less)
is an economical hardenability agent in
low-or-medium-carbon deoxidized
steels. It has no effect on tensile
strength.
Boron
83
It improves hardenability economically,
resistance to corrosion (with other
alloys), strength at high temperature,
and wearing properties (high carbon).
Chromium
84
It improves red hardness.
Cobalt
85
It is often used to “stabilize” stainless
steel (that is, it preempts the carbon
and forestalls the formation of
undesired carbides).
Columbium
86
It improves steel’s resistance to
atmospheric corrosion and increases
the fluidity of the melt; it improves
tensile strength and yield ratio at
normalized condition.
Copper
87
It improves the machinability, but
affects different alloys differently.
Lead
88
It improves strength and increases
hardenability moderately, counteracts
brittleness for sulfur.
Manganese
89
It becomes an alloying element when
its amount exceeds about 0.6% as in
the 13XX steels.
Manganese
90
It contains 1.2% Carbon and 12-13%
Manganese and responds to work
hardening most readily.
Austenitic Manganese
Steels
91
It increases hardenability markedly and
economically (when Mo>Cr), tends to
counteract temper brittleness,
improving creep strength and red
hardness. It improves wear by forming
abrasion-resistant particles.
Molybdenum
92
Strengthens unquenched and annealed
steels, toughens steel (especially at low
temperatures), and simplifies heat
treatment by lessening distortion.
Nickel
93
It increases hardenability, strengthens
low-carbon steels, improves
machinability of stainless steel; also
added to leaded resulfurized carbon
steels for the same purpose.
Selenium
94
-
-
95
It strengthens low-alloy steels and
improves resistance to high
temperature oxidation; it is a good
general-purpose deoxidizer and
promotes fine grain.
Silicon
96
It is a Stabilizer.
Tantalum
97
It is used for deoxidation and for
stabilizing austenitic stainless steels
(preventing intergranular corrosion and
embrittlement); it increases the
hardness and strength of low-carbon
steel and improves creep strength).
Titanium
98
It increases the hardenability markedly
in small amounts and improves
hardness and strength at high
temperature. An expensive alloy, it is
used only where particular advantage
results, as in high-speed tool steel in
which it forms a hard, abrasion –
resisting carbide).
Tungsten
99
It promotes fine-grain structure, improves
the ratio of endurance strength to ultimate
strength of medium carbon-steels (average
of about 0.57), increases hardenability
strongly when dissolved, and results in
retention of strength and hardness at high
temperature; it is the most effective element
in retarding softening and tempering.
Vanadium
100
It is the capacity of steel to through-
harden when cooled from above its
transformation range.
Hardenability
101
It is the process of adding carbon to the
surface of steel by exposing it to hot
carbonaceous solid, liquids, or gases
above the transformation temperature.
Carburizing
102
The part is immersed in a molten salt
bath that imparts a case similar to that
obtained with gas or pack carburizing
except that the case in thinner, usually
not in excess of about 0.025 in.
Liquid carburizing
103
It is accomplished by immersing the
part in a hot (about 1550 deg. F) liquid
salt bath, sodium cyanide (NaCN)
being a common medium in both
processes.
Cyaniding
104
The machined and heat-treated part is
placed in a nitrogenous environment,
commonly ammonia gas, at
temperatures much lower that those
used in the previously described
processes say 1000 deg. F for
somewhat less.
Nitriding
105
It is the process of case hardening steel
by simultaneous absorption of carbon
and nitrogen from a surrounding hot
gaseous atmosphere, followed by
either quenching or slow cooling, as
required.
Carbonitriding
106
It consists of heating a thin surface
layer preferably of annealed or
normalized steel above the
transformation range by electrical
induction and then cooling, as required
in water, oil, air, or gas.
Induction Heating
107
It is the process of heating the surface
of an iron-base alloy, which is
preferably annealed or normalized and
then quenching it.
Flame Hardening
108
It is the result of a metal being stressed
at some point into its plastic range,
usually ordinary temperatures (certainly
below recrystallization temperature);
metal cold worked in this manner
becomes stronger and more brittle.
Work hardening
109
It is made by burning carbon from
molten iron then putting the product
through hammering and rolling
operations.
Wrought Iron
110
It is heat-treated white cast iron.
Malleable Cast Iron
111
The heat treatment of the white cast
iron, in which substantially all of the
carbon is combined in the form of iron
carbide, is an annealing called:
Malleablizing
112
Nodular Cast Iron is also called:
Ductile Iron
113
Age hardening is usually termed as ___
with reference to stainless, which
occurs because of the precipitation of a
constituent from a supersaturated solid
solution.
Precipitation Hardening
114
Are toothed wheels whose tooth
elements are straight and parallel to the
shaft axis; they are used to transmit
motion and power between parallel
shafts.
Spur Gears
115
It is the basis of measurement of gears.
Pitch Circle
116
The size of a gear is called
Pitch Diameter
117
It is the trace of the:
Pitch cylinder
118
It is the point of the pitch circles; for
individual gear, the pitch point will be
located where the tooth profile cuts the
standard pitch circle.
Pitch Point
119
It is the circle that bounds the outer
ends of the teeth.
Addendum Circle
(also called
outside circle)
120
The radial distance between the pitch
circle and the addendum circle is
called:
Addendum
121
It is the circle that bounds the bottom of
the teeth.
Dedendum Circle
122
The radial distance from the pitch circle
to the root circle, that is, to the bottom
of the tooth space.
Dedendum
123
The ____ is equal to the addendum
plus dedendum.
Whole depth
124
The ____ is equal to the radial distance
from the addendum circle to the
working depth circle.
Working depth
125
It marks the distance that the mating
tooth projects into the tooth space; it is
the sum of the addendums of mating
gears.
Working depth circle
126
The ____ is the radial distance
between the working-depth circle and
the root circle; it is the dedendum
minus the mating addendum.
Clearance
127
It is also called tooth thickness. It is the
width of tooth measured along the pitch
circle.
Circular thickness
128
It is the toothed width space between
teeth measured along the chord of pitch
circle.
Chordal thickness
129
It is the tooth space minus the circular
thickness.
Backlash
130
It is the surface of the tooth between
the pitch circle and root cylinders.
flank
131
It is the surface of the top of the tooth.
Top land
132
It is the surface of the bottom of the
tooth space.
Bottom land
133
When two gears mesh, the smaller is
called:
pinion
134
When two gears mesh, the larger is
called:
gear
135
The angle through which the gear turns
from the time a particular pair of teeth
come into contact until they go out of
contact.
Angle of action
136
It is the angle through which the gear
turns from the time a given pair of teeth
are in contact at the pitch point until
they pass out of mesh.
Angle of recess
137
It is the angular velocity of the driver
divided by the angular velocity of the
driven gear.
Velocity ratio
138
It is the number of teeth in the gear
divided by the number of teeth in the
pinion.
Gear ratio
139
Describes a time-temperature-
depending change in the properties of
certain alloys.
Aging
140
A term denoting a treatment consisting
of heating to and holding suitable
temperature followed by cooling at a
suitable rate used primarily to soften
but also to simultaneously produce
desired changes in other properties or
in microstructure.
Annealing
141
Box or Pot annealing used mainly for
sheet, trip or wire.
Black Annealing
142
Heating hot-rolled sheet in an open
furnace to a temperature within the
transformation range and then cooling
in air, to soften the metal. The formation
of a bluish oxide on the surface is
incidental.
Blue Annealing
143
Annealing is a sealed container under
conditions that minimizes oxidation.
This is also called “closed annealing” or
“pot annealing”.
Box Annealing
144
Annealing in protective medium to
prevent discoloration of the bright
surface.
Bright Annealing
145
Annealing process employing
predetermined and closely controlled
time-temperature cycle to produce
specific properties or microstructure.
Cycle Annealing
146
Annealing in which the heat is applied
directly to the flame.
Flame Annealing
147
Austenitizing and then cooling at a rate
such that the hardness of the product
approaches a minimum.
Full Annealing
148
Annealing in such a way that some or
all of the carbon is precipitated as
graphite.
Graphatizing
149
Annealing at one or more stages during
manufacture and before final thermal
treatment.
Intermediate Annealing
150
Austenitizing and then cooling to and
holding at a temperature at which
austenite transforms to a relatively soft
ferrite-carbide aggregate.
Isothermal Annealing
151
A term used to denote various heat
treatments that improve workability. For
the term to be meaningful, the condition
of the material and the time-
temperature cycle used must be stated.
Process Annealing
152
Annealing an austenitic alloy by
solution heat treatment.
Quench Annealing
153
Heating and cooling in a cycle designed
to produce a spheroidal or globular
form of carbide.
Spheroidizing
154
Quenching from a temperature above
the transformation range in medium
having rate of heat abstraction high
enough to prevent the formation of high
temperature formation products.
Austempering
155
Forming of austenite by he ating into
the transformation (partial austenitizing)
or above transformation (full
austenitizing) range.
Austenitizing
156
Heating at low temperature in order to
remove entrained gases.
Baking
157
A treatment of surface of iron-based
alloys usually in the form of sheet or
strip on which by the action of air or
stream at a suitable temperature, a thin
blue oxide film is formed on the initially
scale-free surface, as a means of
improving appearance and resistance
to corrosion.
Bluing
158
A measure of the ability of an
environment containing active carbon
to alter or maintain under prescribed
condition, the carbon content of steel
exposed to it.
Carbon Potential
159
The process of introducing elements
into the outer layer of metal objects by
means of high-temperature diffusion.
Cementation
160
Exposing to suitable subzero
temperatures for the purpose of
obtaining desired conditions or
properties, such as dimensional or
microstructural stability.
Cold Treatment
161
A preliminary heat treatment used to
prepare a material for a desired
reaction to subsequent heat treatment.
Conditional Heat Treatment
162
A term used to describe a process by
which a steel object is cooled from an
elevated temperature, usually from the
final hot-forming operation in the
predetermined manner of cooling to
avoid hardening, cracking or internal
damage.
Controlled Cooling
163
What is synonymous with
Transformation Range?
Critical Range or
Critical Temperature Range
164
A process of case hardening an iron-
base alloy by simultaneous absorption
of carbon and nitrogen by heating in a
cyanide salt.
Cyaniding
165
What follows to cyaniding to produce
hard case?
Quenching
166
The loss of carbon from the surface of
an iron-base alloy as the result of
heating in a medium that reacts with
the carbon.
decarburization
167
It is synonymous with Tempering.
Drawing
168
The alloy composition that freezes as
constant temperatures similar to a pure
metal.
Eutectic Alloy
169
In a ferrous alloy, the property that
determines the depth and distribution of
hardness induced by quenching.
Hardenability
170
Any process of increasing the hardness
of metal by suitable treatment, usually
involving heating and cooling.
Hardening
171
A high temperature heat treatment
process intended to eliminate or to
decrease chemical segregation by
diffusion.
Homogenizing
172
A process of annealing white cast iron
in which the combined carbon is wholly
or in part transformed to graphitic or
free carbon and, in some cases, part of
the carbon is removed completely.
Malleablizing
173
A precipitation hardening treatment
applied to a special group of iron-base
alloy to precipitate one or more
intermetallic compounds in a matrix of
essentially carbon-free martensite.
Maraging
174
A hardening procedure in which an
austenized ferrous workpiece is
quenched into an appropriate medium.
The treatment is usually followed by
tempering.
Martempering
175
The exposure of metal to an unduly
high temperature. It develops an
undesirably coarse grain structure but
is not permanently damaged.
Overheating
176
A process of heat treatment applied to
medium-or high carbon steel in wire making
prior to wire drawing of between drafts. It
consists in heating to a temperature above
the transformation range, followed by
cooling to a temperature appropriate to the
carbon content of the steel and the
properties required to finished product.
Patenting
177
Rapid Cooling is known as:
Quenching
178
Quenching carburized parts directly
from the carburizing operation.
Direct Quenching
179
Quenching carburized parts directly
from the carburizing operation.
Direct Quenching
180
Quenching in the mists.
Fog Quenching
181
An imprecise term used to cover a
variety of quenching procedures in
which quenching medium is maintained
at a prescribed temperature above 160
deg.
Hot Quenching
182
A quenching procedure in which
workpiece is removed from the first
quench at a temperature substantially
higher than that of the quenchant and is
then subjected to a second quenching
system having a different cooling rate
than the first.
Interrupted Quenching
183
Quenching only certain portions of a
workpiece.
Selective Quenching
184
The incomplete hardening of steel due
to quenching from the austenitizing
temperature at the slower rate that the
critical cooling rate for the particular
steel, resulting from the formation of
one or more transformation products in
addition to martensite.
Slack Quenching
185
Quenching in a spray of liquid.
Spray Quenching
186
Interrupted quenching in which the
duration of holding in the quenching
medium is controlled.
Time Quenching
187
Prolonged heating of metal at a
selected temperature.
Soaking
188
A treatment applied to stabilize the
dimensions of a workpiece or the
structure of a material.
Stabilizing Treatment
189
The free or graphitic carbon that comes
out of solution usually in the form of
rounded nodules in the structure during
graphitizing or malleabilizing.
Temper Carbon
190
Heat or quench-hardened or
normalized ferrous alloy to a
temperature below transformation
range to produce desired changes in
properties.
Tempering
191
A treatment in which quench hardened
steel is given two complete tempering
cycles at substantially the same
temperature.
Double Tempering
192
A precautionary interim stress-relieving
treatment applied to high hardenability
steels immediately after quenching to
prevent cracking because of delay in
tempering then at the prescribed higher
temperature.
Snap Temper
193
Brittleness that results when certain
steels are held within, or are cooled
slowly through a certain range of
temperatures below transformation
range.
temper brittleness
194
The critical or transformation point at
which pearlite is transformed into
austeninte as it is being heated is also
called/;
decalesence point
195
A heating to an appropriate
temperature immadiately prior to
austenitizing when hardening nigh-
hardenability constructional steels,
many of the tools steels and heavy
sections.
Preheating
196
A process to reduce internal residual
stresses in a metal object by heating
the object to a suitable temperature and
holding for a proper time at that
temperature.
Stress Relieving
197
The element iron in the form
metallurgically known as ferrite.
ferrite
198
The chemical compound iron carbide in
the form metallurgically known as:
cementite
199
The temperature at which a change in
phase occurs.
transformation temperature
200
A fully annealed steel that has 0.85%
carbon is known as:
hypoeutectoid steel
201
The critical or transformation point at
which austenite is transformed back
into pearlite on cooling is called:
decalescence point
202
The critical or transformation point at
which straight teeth cut parallel to the
axes. Tooth loads produce no axial
thrust. Shaft rotates in opposite
directions.
External Spur Gears
203
Compact drive arrangements for
transmitting motion between parallel
shafts rotating in the same direction.
Internal Spur Gears
204
These are cylindrical gears with teeth
cut at angle to the axes. Provide rive
between shafts rotating in opposite
directions, with superior load carrying
capacity and quietness of spur gear.
Tooth loads produce axial thrust.
Helical Gears
205
These are helical gears that mesh
together on non-parallel axes.
Crossed Helical Gears
206
Gears that have teeth that are radial
toward the apex and are of conical
form.
Straight Bevel Gears
207
Gears that have curved oblique teeth
that contact each other smoothly and
gradually from one end of a tooth to the
other end.
Spiral Bevel Gear
208
Gears having curved teeth lying in the
same general direction as straight
bevel teeth but should be considered to
be spiral bevel gears with zero spiral
angle.
Zerol Bevel Gears
209
Gears that are cross between spiral
bevel gears and worm gears. The axes
of these gears are non-intersecting and
non-parallel.
Hypoid Bevel Gears
210
Gears that are used to transmit motion
between shafts at right angles, do not
lie in the common plane and sometime
to connect the shafts at other angles.
These gears have line tooth contact
and are used for power transmission.
Worm Gears
211
It is the dimension of the tooth face
width that makes contact with a mating
gear.
Active Face
212
It is the radial or perpendicular distance
between the pitch circle and the top of
the tooth.
Addendum
213
It is the arc of the pitch circle through
which a tooth travels from the first point
of contact with the mating tooth to the
point where contact ceases.
Arc of Action
214
It is the arc of pitch through which a
thought travels from the first point of
contact with the mating tooth to the
pitch point.
Arc of Approach
215
It is the arc of the pitch circle through
which a tooth travels from its contract
with a mating tooth at a pitch point until
contact ceases.
Arc of recession
216
It is the distance parallel to the axis
between corresponding sides of the
adjacent teeth.
Axial Pitch
217
It is the plane that contains the two
axes in a pair of gears.
Axial Plane
218
It is the distance parallel to the axis
between two pitch line elements of the
same tooth.
Axial Thickness
219
It is the shortest distance between the
non-driving surfaces of adjacent teeth
when working flanks are in contact.
Backlash
220
It is the circle from which the involute
tooth curve is generated or developed.
Base Circle
221
It is the angle at the base cylinder of an
involute gear that the tooth makes with
the gear axis
Base Helix Angle
222
It is the circular pitch taken on the
circumference of the base circles, or
distance along the line of action
between two successive and
corresponding involute tooth profiles.
Base Pitch
223
It is the distance on the base circle in
the plane of rotation between involutes
of the same pitch.
Base Tooth Thickness
224
It is the surface of the gear between the
flanks of adjacent teeth.
Bottom Land
225
It is the shortest distance between the
non-interesting axes of mating gears, or
between the parallel axed of spur gears
and the parallel helical gears, or the
crossed axes of crossed helical gears
or worm gears.
Center Distance
226
It is the plane perpendicular to the gear
axis in a worm gear. In the usual
arrangement with the axes at right
angles, it contains the worm axis.
Central Plane
227
It is the radial distance from the circular
thickness chord to the top of the tooth.
Chordal Addendum
228
It is the length of the chord subtended
by the circular thickness arc.
Chordal Thickness
229
It is the distance on the circumference
of the pitch circle in the plane of
rotation between corresponding points
of adjacent teeth.
Circular Pitch
230
It is the thickness of the tooth on the
pitch circle in the plane of rotation or
the length of arc between two sides of
the gear tooth measured on the pitch
circle.
Circular Thickness
231
It is the radial distance between the top
of a tooth and the bottom of a mating
tooth space, or the amount by which
the dedendum in a give gear exceeds
the addendum of its mating gear.
Clearance
232
It is the smallest diameter on a gear
tooth with which the mating gear makes
contact.
Contact Diameter
233
It is the ratio of the arc of action in the
plane of rotation to the circular pitch,
and is sometimes thought as the
average number of teeth in contact.
Contact Ratio
234
It is the ratio of the face advantage to
the circular pitch in helical gears.
contact ratio face
235
It is the ratio of the sum of the arc of
action and the face advantage to the
circular pitch.
Contact ratio total
236
It is the maximum compressive stress
within the contact are between mating
gear tooth profiles. Also called hertz
stress.
Contact Stress
237
It is the curve formed by the path of a
point on a circle as it rolls along a
straight line.
Cycloid
238
If rolls along the outside of another
circle then it is called:
Epicycloid
239
If it rolls along the inside of another
circle then it is called:
Hypocycloid
240
It is the ratio of the number of teeth to
the number of inches in the pitch
diameter in the plane of rotation, or the
number of gear teeth to each inch of
pitch diameter.
Diametral Pitch
241
It is the torque ratio of a gear set
divided by its gear ratio.
Efficiency
242
It is the radius of curvature of the pitch
surface at the pitch point in a plane
normal to the pitch line element.
Equivalent pitch radius
243
It is the distance on the pitch circle that
a gear tooth travels from the time pitch
point contact is made at one end of the
tooth until the pitch point contact is
made at the other end.
Face Advance
244
It is the radius of the concave portion of
the tooth profile where it joints the
bottom of the tooth space.
Fillet Radius
245
It is the maximum tensile stress in the
gear tooth fillet.
Fillet Stress
246
It is the surface between the pitch circle
and the bottom land, including the gear
tooth.
Flank tooth
247
It is the ratio between the numbers of
tooth in the mating gears.
Gear Ratio
248
It is the ration effective face width of a
helical gear divided by the gear axial
pitch.
Helical Overlap
249
It is the angle that a helical gear tooth
makes with the gear axis at the pitch
circle, unless specified otherwise.
Helix Angle
250
It is the largest diameter on a spur gear
oat which a single tooth is in contact
with the mating gear.
HPSTC
(Highest Point of Single Contact)
251
Is the contact between mating teeth at
some point other that along the line
action.
Interference
252
It is the diameter of a circle that
coincides with the tops of the teeth of
an internal gear.
Internal Diameter
253
It is a gear with teeth on the inner
cylindrical surface.
Internal gear
254
It is the curve generally used as a
profile of gear teeth. The curve is the
path of a point on a straight line as it
rolls along a convex base curve usually
a circle.
Involute
255
It is the top surface of the gear.
Top Land
256
It is the surface of the gear between the
fillets of adjacent layers.
Bottom Land
257
It is the axial advance of the helix in
one complete turn, or the distance
along its own axis on one revolution if
the gear were free to move axially.
Lead
258
It is the distance of on one involute line
of action through which the point of
contact moves during the action of the
tooth profile.
Length of action
259
It is the portion of the common tangent
to the base cylinders along which
contact between mating involute teeth
occurs.
Line of action
260
It is the smallest diameter on a spur
gear at which a single tooth is in
contact with its mating gear.
(LPSTC)
Lowest Point of
Single Tooth Contact
261
It is the ratio of the pitch diameter to the
number of teeth, normally the ratio of
pitch diameter in mm to the number of
teeth.
Module
262
It is a plane normal to the tooth
surfaces at a point of contact and
perpendicular to the pitch plane.
Normal Plane
263
It is the diameter of the circle that
contains the tops of the teeth of
external gears.
Outside diameter
264
It is the distance between similar,
equally-spaced tooth surfaces in a
given direction along a given curve or
line.
Pitch
265
It is the circle through the pitch point
having its center at the gear axis.
Pitch Circle
266
It is the intersection between the axes
of the line of centers and the line of
action.
Pitch Point
267
It is the angle between a tooth profile
and a radial line at its pitch point.
Pressure angle
268
A gear with teeth spaced along a
straight line suitable for straight line
motion.
Rack Gear
269
An angle subtended at the center of a
base circle from the origin of an
involute to the point of tangency of a
point of a straight line from any point on
the same involute.
Roll Angle
270
It is the diameter of the circle that
contains the roots or bottoms of the
tooth spaces.
Root Diameter
271
An arbitrary modification of a tooth
profile where small amount of material
is removed from the involute space of
the tooth surfaces near the tip of the
gear tooth.
Tip Relief
272
It is the surface between the pitch line
of element and the tooth tip.
Tooth Face
273
It is the total tooth area including the
flank of the tooth and the tooth face.
Tooth Surface
274
It is the dimensional width of a gear
blank and may exceed the effective
face width as with a double helical gear.
Total Face
275
It is the curve formed by path of a point
on the extension of the radius of a
circle as it rolls along a curve or a line.
Trochoid
276
It is the condition of general gear teeth
when any part of the fillet curve lies
inside a line drawn at a tangent to the
working profile at its lowest point.
Under Cut
277
It is the total depth of a tooth space,
equal to the addendum plus dedendum
and equal to the working depth plus
clearance.
Whole Depth
278
It is the depth of engagement of two
gears or the sum of their addemdums.
Working Depth
279
-
280
It is the heat treatment that uses a
concentrated flame impinging on a
localized area for a controlled amount
of time to heat the part, followed by
quenching in a bath or by a stream of
water or oil.
Flame Hardening
281
It is the process in which the part is
surrounded by a coil through which
high frequency electric current is
passed.
Induction Hardening
282
The usual goal of case hardening is to
produce a case hardness in the range
of Rockwell C hardness HRC 55 to 60
of a Brinell Hardness of:
550 to 650
283
Carburizing when properly done will
produce a case hardness of:
HB 550 to 700
(Brinell Hardness)
284
Stainless steel characterizes high level
of corrosion resistance and must have
a chromium content of at least how
many percent?
At least 10% chromium
285
The three main groups of stainless
steel :
Ferritic (AISI 400 series)
Austenitic (AISI 200 and 300 series)
Martensitic also 400 series including
403, 410, 414 and etc.
286
Most structural steel are designed by
what?
ASTM
287
The steels used typically for cutting
tools, punches, dies, shearing blades,
chisels.
Tool Steels
288
HSLA Steels means:
High-Strength Low-Alloy
289
Large gears, machine structures,
bracelets, linkage parts, and other
important machine parts are usually
made from:
Cast iron
290
What iron available in grades having
tensile strengths ranging from 20 000 to
60 000 psi?
Gray iron
291
A group of heat-treatable cast irons with
moderate to high strength, high
modulus of elasticity (stiffness), good
machinability, and good wear
resistance.
Malleable Iron
292
It is an alloyed and heat-treated Alloy. It
has attractive properties that lead to its
use in transportation equipment
industrial machinery and other
applications where the low cost, good
machinability.
Austempered ductile iron
293
Aluminum Alloy groups designation:
1xxx 99% or greater aluminum
content
2xxx copper
3xxx manganese
4xxx silicon
5xxx magnesium
6xxx magnesium and silicon
7xxx zinc
294
The fourth most commonly used metal
in the world.
Zinc
295
The most widely used zinc casting alloy
is called Alloy No. 3 sometimes referred
to as:
Zamak 3
296
It is usually used in aerospace structure
and components, chemical tank and
processing equipment. It is a high
strength-to-weight ratio.
Titanium
297
It is widely used in its nearly pure form
for electrical and plumbing applications
because of its high electrical
conductivity and good corrosion
resistance.
Copper
298
It is the family of alloys of copper and
zinc.
Brass
299
Inconel means:
Nickel-Chromium
300
Monel means:
Nickel-Copper alloy
301
Ni-Resists
Nickel-Iron alloy
302
Hastelloys:
Nickel-Molybdenum alloys,
sometimes chromium, iron,
or copper
303
Metals usually used for condenser and
other heat exchanger tubes and plates:
Admiralty Metal
304
A type of brass used for electrical
fixtures, plumbing, wires, pins, rivets,
screw, spring, architectural grillwork,
radiator cores.
Yellow Brass
305
It is used in clutch disks, pump rods,
shaft, valve stems, welding rod.
Manganese Bronze
306
It is primarily an alloy of nickel and
copper (67 Ni, 30 Cu).
Monel
307
Ordinary steel begins to lose strength
(and elasticity) significantly at about:
600 – 700 deg. F
308
Polytetrafluoroethylene is also called
tetrafluoroethylene TFE or known as:
Teflon
309
Prolong heating at a temperature below
melting point is called:
Sintering
310
The process of melting layer of another
metal such as lead or copper into pores
of sintered material.
Infiltration
311
The circle in which the involute is
generated.
Base circle
312
The expression used to define the base
circle for a particular pitch circle.
Degree of involute
313
It is the measure of spacing and usually
also of the size of the tooth.
Pitch
314
It is the distance measured along the
pitch circle from a point on one tooth to
the corresponding point on an adjacent
tooth.
Circular pitch
315
It is the ratio of the number of teeth per
inch of the pitch diameter.
Diametral pitch
316
It is the ratio of the angle of action to
the pitch angle.
Contact ratio
317
It is the ratio of the length of action to
the base pitch.
Contact ratio
318
It is the ratio of the arc of action to the
circular pitch.
Contact ratio
319
For best running gear condition, the
contact ratio should be:
1.25 to 1.4
320
Gear that ahs teeth cut on the inside of
the rim instead of outside of the rim.
Internal or annular gear
321
Gears that are most often used in
heavy-duty gear boxes.
Helical and herringbone gears
322
The other name of crossed helical
gears.
Spiral gear
323
Gears used to connect intersecting
shaft but not necessarily 90 degrees.
Bevel gears
324
Gears used to transmit power between
nonintersecting shafts, nearly always at
right angles to each other.
Worm gearing
325
End