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Letter 41095
Protecting threaded holes during
anodizing
++++++
I have multiple parts that have a threaded hole that are black
anodized. The problem is that the threads are becoming oversized
after they have been tapped. Could this be a result of the anodizing
process.
Brian Smith
Contract Metal stamper - Mankato, MN, USA
First of two simultaneous responses -- ++++++
NO. It is a result of a very agressive etch being used in the
preprocess steps. Silicon pull plugs will protect the threads, but to
really seal the threads, they need to be slightly oversize which will
leave a tiny ring around the hole that is not anodized. If the
anodize is thin, you could tap the hole, with a water alcohol
lubricant, after the anodize. Helicoils or PEM fasteners are possible
alternatives.
James Watts
- Navarre, Florida
Second of two simultaneous responses -- ++++++
Yes, it could be. Anodizing a part almost always results in a
change in dimensions - between the etching that decreases the size of
the part and the build-up of the anodize that increases it the part
is rarely exactly the same size afterward. In my experience - and
with the parts I work with - it is usually smaller (making any holes
slightly larger).
Get the parts as clean as possible at your facility, and then tell
your anodizer to give them a much lighter etch - it might be exactly
what you need. The more difficult answer is to make the parts
slightly larger, so the anodizing process drops them into
specification, but that is a heck of a lot more complicated and
likely to fail.
Good luck!
++++++
Absolutely....
If the Anodizer you are using is etching the parts to long or at to
high of a temprature the etch will most certainly remove enough
material to oversize a hole on a part..
You should speak with your plater about the necessity of the tight
tolerance of the holes and arrange to either plug the holes, mask, or
reduce/eliminate the etch time completely..
++++++
On first glance the first two answers might look confusing and
appear to contradict each other - so, to clear up the confusion...
When I said "yes" I was interpreting "anodizing" to mean "I sent this
to a shop to get anodized" and inherently include the pre-process
steps. James Watts' answer is completely correct - the material loss
is due to the etch, not the actual anodizing step - but the problem
would be occuring during the anodizing process as a whole.
Sorry for the confusion.
Good luck!
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