Cold and Hot Forging: An Overview

요약:

Forging is a metal shaping process in which a malleable metal part, known as a blank, billet or work-piece, is worked to a predetermined shape by one or more processes such as hammering, upsetting, pressing, rolling and so forth. Cold forming is a precision category of forging which does the same thing without heating of the material (room temperature), or removal of material.

Among all manufacturing processes, forging technology has a special place because it can be used to produce parts of superior mechanical properties with minimum waste of material.

Forging can be produced at multiple temperature levels. Room temperature (or heat added process) forging is commonly called cold forging. This process is less costly, less heat energy consuming, provides greater dimensional accuracy, and can be very efficient for mass production of small parts (less than 50lbs). The downfall is that it requires much larger pressures to form the metal requiring large machinery and more frequent tool wear.

At the other end of the temperature spectrum is hot forging, where the work piece is heated up to about 75% of its melting temperature. As the temperature of the work piece, prior to forging approaches the melting temperature, the flow stress and energy required to form the material is decreased. Therefore, the strain rate or rate of production can be increased. This is a more expensive approach to metal forging and can be detrimental, leading to die failure by thermal stresses.

Generally, forging is a metal shaping process in which a malleable metal part, known as a blank, billet or work-piece, is worked to a predetermined shape by one or more processes such as hammering, upsetting, pressing, rolling and so forth. Cold forming is a precision category of forging which does the same thing without heating of the material (room temperature), or removal of material.

Forging results in metal that is stronger than cast or machined metal parts. This stems from the grain flow caused through forging. As the metal is pounded the grains deform to follow the shape of the part, thus the grains are unbroken throughout the part. Some modern parts take advantage of this for a high strength-to-weight ratio.

Many metals are forged cold, but iron and its alloys are almost always forged hot. This is for two reasons: first, if work hardening were allowed to progress, hard materials such as iron and steel would become extremely difficult to work with; secondly, steel can be strengthened by other means than cold-working, thus it is more economical to hot forge and then heat treat. Alloys that are amenable to precipitation hardening, such as most alloys of aluminum and titanium, can also be hot forged and then hardened. Other materials must be strengthened by the forging process itself.

Cold Forging

The cold forming process is similar to the cold heading process, however, the process uses vertical presses instead of horizontal cold heading machines. The cold forming process is also volume specific and the process uses dies and punches to convert a specific "slug" or blank of a given volume into a finished intricately shaped part of the exact same volume. The cold forming process generally compliments the cold heading process by adding more intricate shapes to the cold headed blank.

Cold forging is a reliable and cost efficient process. The main advantages are the following:

  • savings in material and final machining,
  • high productivity,
  • excellent dimensional accuracy and surface quality of cold extruded parts,
  • improvement of mechanical properties of extruded parts,
  • favorable crystal grain flow increases toughness.

Cold forging encompasses many processes: bending, cold drawing, cold heading, coining, extrusion, punching, thread rolling and more to yield a diverse range of part shapes.

The main groups of produced cold forged parts are:

  • Parts for starter motors (pinion, barrel, solenoid body, plunger, core…)
  • Parts for alternators (claw pole…)
  • Parts for switches, valves and other applications
  • Parts for car seats
  • Anti vibration parts, spiders, inner racks
  • Parts for flywheel magnetos and other motorbike parts
  • Hollow parts with stems and shafts
  • Different gears and other parts etc.

Single Step Cold Forming Process



Figure 1: Scheme of cold forming process steep

The basic type of equipment used in cold forming is a vertical press either manually fed or fully automatic. Vertical presses can be powered mechanically or hydraulically.



Figure 2: Cold forming process



Figure 3: Cold forged parts for automotive electrical industry

Hot forging

Hot forging, also referred to as drop forging, is a process that can be used to produce a wide variety of parts in most metals. Generally, forging is the process of forming and shaping metals through the use of hammering, pressing or rolling. Forgings are produced in sizes ranging from a few millimeters maximum dimension up to 3 m or more in some cases.

The principles and practices of hot forging have been established since the last century, but improvements have obviously been made in equipment, lubricants and the ability to process the more difficult to forge materials since that time.

Hot forging is a plastic deformation of metal at a temperature and strain rate such that recrystallization occurs simultaneously with deformation, thus avoiding strain hardening. For this to occur, high workpiece temperature (matching the metal's recrystallization temperature) must be attained throughout the process.

A form of hot forging is isothermal forging, where materials and dies are heated to the same temperature. In nearly all cases, isothermal forging is conducted on super alloys in a vacuum or highly controlled atmosphere to prevent oxidation.

Because the metal is hot, it is easy to move it around, allowing for more elaborate shapes than cold forging. Hot forging is common for harder metals such as steel that would be difficult to shape when cold. The process begins with a cast ingot, which is heated to its plastic deformation temperature, then forged between dies to the desired shape and size. During this forging process, the cast, coarse grain structure is broken up and replaced by finer grains, achieved through the size reduction of the ingot.

Depending on the metal and the degree to which it was heated, the forging process itself might suffice to temper, or strengthen, the material. Usually, the product is additionally heat treated after it is hot forged.

Figure 4 shows schematically heat treatment which occurs in the hot forging process of casted ingot and Figure 5 presents some examples of hot forged parts.



Figure 4: Hot forged process



Figure 5: Hot Forged parts

기술 자료 검색

검색할 어구를 입력하십시오:

검색 범위

본문
키워드

머릿글
요약

Total Materia는 단조용으로 적합한 다양한 국가와 규격 내 수천개의 재질에 대한 정보를 포함하고 있습니다.

재질의 화학적 조성, 기계적 특성, 물리적 특성, 고급 물성 데이터 등의 전체적인 특성 정보들을 어디서든 검토하실 수 있습니다.

고금 검색 내 규격 설명 기능을 이용하여, 규격 내 재질에 설명된 키워드를 통해 재질을 검색하실 수 있습니다.

검색 범위 좀 더 줄이기를 원하신다면 국가/규격과 같은 다른 조건을 지정할 수 있습니다.

검색 버튼을 클릭합니다.


선택된 정보에 부합하는 일련의 재질이 검색됩니다.


결과 리스트에서 재질을 선택하시면, 일련의 규격 사양 소그룹이 나타납니다.

여기에서 선택한 재질의 특정 특성 데이터를 검토하실 수도 있고, 강력한 상호 참조 표를 이용하여 유사 재질이나 등가 재질을 검토하는 것 또한 가능합니다.


예를 들어, 소그룹 내 기계적 특성 링크를 클릭하시면, 재질의 항복 응력, 인장 응력, 연신율 및 충격 데이터 등과 같은 기계적 특성들을 검토 하실 수 있습니다.


Total Materia 데이터베이스를 사용해 보실 수 있는 기회가 있습니다. 저희는 Total Materia 무료 체험을 통해 150,000명 이상의 사용자가 이용하고 있는 커뮤니티로 귀하를 초대합니다.