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What are Mechanical Galvanized Fasteners




Q. I have a customer who is requesting Mechanically Galvanized Fasteners for a job. I am having a problem trying to determine if these are the same as Hot Dipped Fasteners, Zinc Plated Fasteners or something totally different. Anyone know?

DONALD T [last name deleted for privacy by Editor]
-Brewer, Maine
1999


A. Hi Donald

Steel fasteners are coated with zinc and zinc alloys for decorative value sometimes, but always to retard rust via sacrificial protection.

There are many different ways to apply the zinc including zinc electroplating, mechanical plating, sherardizing, hot dip galvanizing, zinc-rich dip-spin coatings, etc. The protective value of the zinc depends to some extent on the exact composition of the alloy because plain zinc, zinc-nickel, zinc-iron, and zinc-cobalt have somewhat different electromotive potentials. But more important is that, because the coating is sacrificial, the protection is largely proportional to the thickness of the zinc coating.

While it might be theoretically possible to apply a given thickness coating via any of these technologies, each technology tends to be most suited and most economical at a different thickness. For example, for thin and inexpensive coatings, zinc electroplating can't be matched. For very heavy coatings capable of lasting many decades in severe outdoor exposure, nothing matches hot dip galvanizing. In between, are the other technologies like mechanical plating/galvanizing, sherardizing, and dip-spin coatings.

There are also secondary considerations like zinc electroplating offering the most decorative look but presenting the danger of hydrogen embrittlement. And, of course, fasteners have threads, and threads can become distorted and out of tolerance with thick coatings.

To address the mechanical galvanizing process specifically, it is a process where zinc powders and very tiny glass beads are tumbled with the fasteners in a way that one part falls upon another with the beads and powder between them, with the beads pounding the powder onto the substrate. It is often specified where the required coating thickness is too high to be practical for zinc electroplating, or where the risk of hydrogen embrittlement of the fastener is considered unacceptable, and where hot dip galvanizing would foul the threads.

Luck and regards,

Ted Mooney, finishing.com
Ted Mooney, P.E.
Striving to live Aloha
finishing.com - Pine Beach, New Jersey




Multiple threads were merged: please forgive repetition, chronology errors, or disrespect towards other postings [they weren't on the same page] :-)



How to know whether coating is mechanical galvanizing?

Q. Hi, I have an Italian customer who produces hardened fasteners has always protected them by the means of hot dip centrifuged process. Now he is suffering competition from German and Hollandaise companies that sell a steel faucet they declare is hot dip galvanized but in fact looks very smooth, regular coating, dark grey matte finish and approx. 85 microns in thickness. Furthermore, the first microscopic analysis revealed a way too regular coating thickness and layer, with no presence of the usual alloy layers. Can anybody help me with suggesting how to assess what kind of coating is that? (it is zinc based, that's for sure)
Thanks a lot

Mario Ubiali
- Brescia, Italy
2007


A. It may be mechanical galvanizing, or possibly thermal diffusion (sort of a successor to Sherardizing) or maybe even a zinc-rich dip-spin coating, Mario. Unfortunately, the person or company who is offering a different coating always knows more about it than the outsider and is always a step ahead. This means one will usually comes off poorly if they try to demonstrate their knowledgable of someone else's coatings.

For that reason I think the best approach in these cases is to test which one is superior in some way. And there is certainly nothing wrong with you deciding what those tests should be to present hot dip centrifuged coatings in the best light.

If you think the other coating is softer, prescribe a scribe test with a hardened knife. If you think your coating has greater salt spray resistance, try that. Better freedom from stick-slip when torquing up, try that. If you think the other coating is not easily strippable, try that. I know you are already very familiar with hot dip galvanizing, but go to some of the trade association websites and read the advantages again and see if you can formulate tests where hot dipping will come out on top. Good luck.

Ted Mooney, finishing.com
Ted Mooney, P.E.
Striving to live Aloha
finishing.com - Pine Beach, New Jersey
2007




Q. Hi

Please tell me the difference between mechanical galvanize and hot dip galvanize.

Thanks

Ghulam Mujtaba Mirza
- Guang Zhou, China
October 11, 2012


none
adv.

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