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From the Rolls-Royce experimental archive: a quarter of a million communications from Rolls-Royce, 1906 to 1960's. Documents from the Sir Henry Royce Memorial Foundation (SHRMF).
Cheap, distortion-free steel hardening process and its potential experimental application.

Identifier  ExFiles\Box 154a\1\  scan0094
Date  15th October 1928 guessed
  
contd :-
-3-
able to give the correct machining allowance on any normal
part if they have the drawings.
Summarising the position, the process appears
to be very cheap and simple. It appears to have got through
the experimental stage even on gears and flexible shafts.
It would appear to be very much cheaper than
case-hardening owing to the absence of distortion enabling the
part to be finished machined before the final hardening in most
cases, except light pieces such as cyl. liners. It is stainless
and rustless.
Such qualities as the steel posssesses would be
course invaluable to us on pieces such as crankshafts, brake
drums, axle gears etc.etc.
Mr. Duval, the French engineer, who has done all
all the development work in France in conjunction with Hispano's
has offered to come over any time and in conjunction with Firth
Derihon, the British Licencee's, see that we get anything we want
rapidly and also incorporating their very latest developments.
We suggest that it mk is worth making every effort to get some
of this steel running experimentally as soon as possible.
Attached to R's copy of this note are photo-
graphs of a few parts actually being treated by Aubert & Duval on
a production scale, also details of the process shewing the
different heat treatment recommended for various types of steel before
hardening.

hs {Lord Ernest Hives - Chair} /Rm. {William Robotham - Chief Engineer}
  
  


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