Engineering Materials: Properties and SelectionFor courses in Metallurgy and Materials Science. Co-authored by Kenneth G. Budinski and Michael K. Budinski, his son, with over 50 years of combined industry experience in the field, this practical, understandable introduction to engineering materials theory and industry-standard selection practices provides students with the working knowledge to (1) make an informed selection of materials for engineering applications and (2) correctly specify materials on drawings and purchasing documents. Encompassing all significant material systems metals, ceramics, plastics, and composites this text incorporates the most up-to-date information on material usage and availability, addresses the increasingly global nature of the field, and reflects the suggestions of numerous adopters of previous editions. |
From inside the book
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... Temper Nominal Tensile Strength [ psi ( MPa ) ] 90,000 ( 620 ) Rockwell Hardness No. 1 hard temper No. 2 half - hard temper No. 3 quarter - hard temper No. 4 skin - rolled temper No. 5 dead - soft temper B - 85 minimum B - 70 to 85 B ...
... temper and deep freeze , some of the retained austenite trans- forms to martensite . The second temper serves to temper the additional martensite formed from the retained austenite . If measures , such as the double - temper process ...
... temper ) DHP copper ( annealed ) C12200 ( hard temper ) Red brass ( annealed ) C23000 ( hard temper ) Free mach . yellow brass C36000 ( hard temper ) Chrome copper ( annealed ) C18200 ( age hardened ) Tin bronze ( annealed ) C90500 cast ...
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Engineering Materials: Properties and Selection Kenneth G. Budinski,Michael K. Budinski No preview available - 2002 |