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GLOSSARY
1. Tolerance
Tolerance is the allowable deviation from a standard, especially the range of
variation permitted in maintaining a specified dimension in machining a piece.
2. Temper
Synonyms: Tempering
Tempering is a process of heat treating, which is used to increase the toughness of
iron-based alloys. Tempering is usually performed after hardening, to reduce some
of the excess hardness, and is done by heating the metal to a much lower temperature
than was used for hardening
3. Hot Rolled
Synonyms: Tempering
In metalworking, rolling is a metal forming process in which metal stock is passed
through a pair of rolls. Rolling is classified according to the temperature of the metal
rolled. If the temperature of the metal is above its recrystallization temperature, then
the process is termed as hot rolling.
4. Annealed
Annealing, in metallurgy and materials science, is a heat
treatment that alters a
material to increase its ductility and to make it more workable. It involves heating
material to above its critical temperature, maintaining a suitable temperature, and
then cooling. Annealing can induce ductility,
soften material, relieve internal
stresses, refine the structure by making it homogeneous, and improve cold working
properties.
5. Alloy
Alloys are mixtures of a metal with other elements, the precise combination being
governed by the required properties. Alloys can be manufactured by various routes,
the most widely used being to melt the constituents together and to cool the resultant
mixture to form a single or multi-phase solid.
6. UNS
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The unified numbering system (UNS) is an alloy
designation system widely
accepted in North America. It consists of a prefix letter and five digits designating a
material composition. A prefix of S indicates stainless steel alloys, C for copper,
brass, or bronze alloys, T for
tool steels, etc. The first three digits often match older
three-digit numbering systems, while the last two digits indicate more modern
variations. For example, Copper Alloy No. 377 (forging brass) in the original three-
digit system became C37700 in the UNS System. The UNS is managed jointly by
the ASTM International and SAE International.
A UNS number alone does not
constitute a full material specification because it establishes no requirements for
material properties, heat treatment, form, or quality.
7. ASTM
ASTM International, known until 2001 as the American Society for Testing and
Materials (ASTM), is an international standards organization
that develops and
publishes voluntary consensus technical standards for a wide range of materials,
products, systems, and services.
8. Hardness
Hardness is a measure of how resistant solid matter is to various kinds of permanent
shape change when a force is applied. Macroscopic hardness is generally
characterized by strong intermolecular bonds, but the
behavior of solid materials
under force is complex; therefore, there are different measurements of hardness:
scratch hardness, indentation hardness, and rebound hardness.
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