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Air-lift hammer — A type
of gravity-drop hammer in which the ram is raised for each stroke by an
air cylinder. Because the length of stroke can be controlled, ram
velocity and therefore the energy delivered to the workpiece can be
varied. See also Drop Hammer and Gravity Hammer. |
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Aircraft quality — Denotes stock of sufficient
quality to be forged into highly stressed parts for aircraft or other
critical applications. Such materials are of extremely high quality,
requiring closely controlled, restrictive practices in their manufacture
in order that they may pass rigid requirements, such as magnetic
particle inspection. |
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Alloy steel forging — One made from a steel
containing additional alloying elements other than carbon (e.g., Ni, Cr,
Mo) to enhance physical and mechanical properties and/or heat-treat
response. |
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AMS — Aeronautical Materials Specification |
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As forged — The condition of a forging as it
comes out of the finisher cavity without any subsequent operations. |
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ASTM (Specifications) — The American Society
for Testing and Materials. |
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Auxiliary operations — Additional processing
steps performed on forgings to obtain properties, such as surface
conditions or shapes, not obtained in the regular processing operation. |
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Axial rolls — In ring rolling, vertically
displaceable, tapered rolls, mounted in a horizontally displaceable
frame opposite from but on the same centerline as the main roll and
rolling mandrel. The axial rolls control the ring height during the
rolling process. |
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Axisymmetric forging — A forging where metal
flow, during deformation, is predominately in a direction away from a
common axis in a radial direction. |
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Backward extrusion —
Forcing metal to flow in a direction opposite to the motion of a punch
or die. |
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Bar — A section hot rolled from a billet to a
form, such as round, hexagonal, octagonal, square, or rectangular, with
sharp or rounded corners or edges, with a cross-sectional area of less
than 16 sq in. (A solid section that is long in relation to its
cross-sectional dimensions, having a completely symmetrical cross
section and whose width or greatest distance between parallel faces is
3/8 in. or more). |
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Bar end — See End Loss. |
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Barreling — Convexity of the surfaces of
cylindrical or conical bodies, often produced unintentionally during
upsetting or as a natural consequence during compression testing. See
also Compression Test. |
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Batch/batch-type furnace — A furnace for
heating materials where all loading and unloading is done through a
single door or slot. |
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Bend or twist (defect) — Distortion similar to
warpage, but resulting from different causes; generally caused in the
forging or trimming operations. When the distortion is along the length
of the part, it is called "bend"; when across the width, it is called
"twist." |
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Bender — A die impression, tool, or mechanical
device designed to bend forging stock to conform to the general
configuration of die impressions subsequently to be used. |
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Bending — A preliminary forging operation to
give the piece approximately the correct shape for subsequent forming. |
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Billet — A semifinished, cogged, hot-rolled,
or continuous-cast metal product of uniform section, usually rectangular
with radiused corners. Billets are relatively larger than bars. See
Bloom. |
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Bite — Amount of the die in contact with the
workpiece throughout one entire forging reduction, e.g., heavy bite is
three-quarter to full width of the die. |
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Blank — Raw material or forging stock (also
called a "slug" or "multiple") from which a forging is made. |
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Blast cleaning — A process for cleaning or
finishing metal objects by use of an air jet or centrifugal wheel that
propels abrasive particles (grit, sand, or shot) against the surfaces of
the workpiece at high velocity. |
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Block — The forging operation in which metal
is progressively formed to general desired shape and contour by means of
an impression die (used when only one block operation is scheduled). |
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Block and finish — The forging operation in
which the part to be forged is blocked and finished in one heat through
the use of a die having both a block impression and a finish impression
in the same die. This also covers the case where two tools mounted in
the same machine are used, as in the case of aircraft pistons. Only one
heat is involved for both operations. |
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Block, first and second — Blocking operation
performed in a die having two blocking cavities in the same die; the
part being forged is successively blocked in each impression all in one
heat. As many as three blocker dies are sometimes needed for some
forgings and up to three operations are sometimes required in each die. |
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Block, first, second, and finish — The forging
operation in which the part to be forged is passed in progressive order
through three tools mounted in one forging machine; only one heat is
involved for all three operations. |
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Blocker impression — The forging die
impression which gives the forging its general shape, but omits any
details that might restrict the metal flow; corners are well rounded.
The primary purpose of the blocker is to enable the forming of shapes
too complex to be finished after the preliminary operations; it also
reduces die wear in the finishing impression. |
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Blocker-type forging — A forging that
approximates the general shape of the final part with relatively
generous finish allowance and radii. Such forgings are sometimes
specified to reduce die costs where only a small number of forgings are
desired and the cost of machining each part to its final shape is not
exorbitant. |
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Bloom — A semifinished product of square,
rectangular, or even round cross section, hot rolled, or forged. For
steel, the width of a bloom is not more than twice the thickness, and
the cross sectional area is usually not less than about 36 sq. in. No
invariable rule prevails for distinguishing between blooms and billets;
the terms are frequently used interchangeably. |
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Board hammer — A type of gravity drop hammer
where wood boards attached to the ram are raised vertically by action of
contrarotating rolls, then released. Energy for forging is obtained by
the mass and velocity of the freely falling ram and the attached upper
die. See also Drop Hammer. |
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Bolster plate — A plate to which dies can be
fastened; the assembly is secured to the top surface of a press bed. In
press forging, such a plate may also be attached to the ram. |
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Boss — A relatively short protrusion or
projection on the surface of a forging, often cylindrical in shape. |
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Breakdown — (1) An initial rolling or drawing
operation, or a series of such operations, for reducing an ingot or
extruded shape to desired size before the finish reduction. (2) A
preliminary press-forging operation. |
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Brinell hardness — The hardness of a metal or
part, as represented by the number obtained from the ratio between the
load applied on and the spherical area of the impression made by a steel
ball forced into the surface of the material tested. The Brinell
Hardness Number (BHN) is determined by measuring the diameter of the
impression using a low power microscope, then matching this diameter
with the load on a standard table. |
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Buckling — A bulge, bend, kink, or other wavy
condition of the workpiece caused by compressive stresses. See also
Compressive Stress. |
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Burning — Permanently damaging a metal or
alloy by heating so as to cause either incipient melting or
intergranular oxidation. |
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Burr — A thin ridge or roughness left on
forgings by cutting operation such as slitting, shearing, trimming,
blanking, or sawing. |
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Buster (rougher) — An impression employed in a
die when considerable metal movement is required and which precedes a
blocker cavity and a finisher cavity. Also known as breakdown/pancake,
scalebreak, cheese. |
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Buster (preblocking impression) — A type of
die impression sometimes used to combine preliminary forging operations
such as edging and fullering with the blocking operation to eliminate
blows. |
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Carbon steel — Steel containing carbon up to
about 1.2%, and only residual amounts of other elements except for those
added for composition control, with silicon usually limited to 0.60 %
and manganese to 1.65%. |
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Cassette — Also known as sub-bolster, die
assembly, trim and pierce assembly. An assembly of top and bottom dies
and/or tools of each forming station assembled into one unit. |
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Cast (proof) — Any reproduction of a die
cavity in any material, frequently lead, plaster or epoxy, used to
confirm the exactness of the cavity. See Die Proof. |
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Cavity, die — The machined recess in a die
that gives the forging its shape. |
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Chamfer — To break or remove sharp edges or
corners of forging stock by means of straight angle tool or grinding
wheel. |
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Charpy impact test — An impact test in which a
specially V-notched specimen is broken by the impact of a falling
pendulum. The energy absorbed in fracture is a measure of the impact
strength or notch toughness of the sample. |
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Check — Crack in a die impression, generally
due to forging pressure and/or excessive die temperature. Die blocks too
hard for the depth of the die impression have a tendency to check or
develop cracks in impression corners. |
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Chop — A die forging defect; metal sheared
from a vertical surface and spread by the die over an adjoining
horizontal surface. |
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Chucking lug — A lug or boss to the forging so
that "on center" machining and forming can be performed with one setting
or chucking; this lug is machined or cut away on the finished item. |
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Cleaning — The process of removing scale,
oxides, or lubricant—acquired during heating for forging or heat
treating—from the surface of the forging. (See also Blasting, Pickling,
Tumbling.) |
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Close-tolerance forging — One held to
closer-than-conventional dimensional tolerances so that little or no
machining is required after forging. See also Precision Forging. |
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Closed die forging — The shaping of hot metal
completely within the walls or cavities of two dies that come together
to enclose the workpiece on all sides. The impression for the forging
can be entirely in either die or divided between the top and bottom
dies. Impression-die forging, often used interchangeably with the term
closed-die forging, refers to a closed-die operation in which the dies
contain a provision for controlling the flow of excess material, or
flash, that is generated. By contrast, in flashless forging, the
material is deformed in a cavity that allows little or no escape of
excess material. See Impression Die Forging. |
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Closing-in — The forging operation that
locally reduces diameters in hollow forgings. |
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Closure, die — A term frequently used to mean
variations in thickness of a forging. |
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Cogging — The reducing operation in which an
ingot is worked into a billet by the use of a forging hammer or a
forging press. |
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Coining — (1) A post-forging process—on hot or
cold parts—used to attain closer tolerances or improved surfaces. (2) A
closed-die squeezing operation in which all surfaces of a workpiece are
confined or restrained, resulting in a well-defined imprint of the die
on the work. |
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Coining dies — Dies in which the coining or
sizing operation is performed. |
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Cold-coined forging — A forging that has been
restruck cold in order to hold closer face distance tolerances, sharpen
corners or outlines, reduce section thickness, flatten some particular
surface, or, in non-heat-treatable alloys, increase hardness. |
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Cold forging — Various forging processes
conducted at or near ambient temperatures to produce metal components to
close tolerances and net shape. These include bending, cold drawing,
cold heading, coining, extrusion (forward or backward), punching, thread
rolling and others. |
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Cold heading — Plastically deforming metal at
ambient temperatures to increase the cross-sectional area of the stock
(either solid bar or tubing) at one or more points along the
longitudinal axis. See also Heading and Upsetting. |
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Cold lap — A flaw that results when a
workpiece fails to fill the die cavity during the first forging. A seam
is formed as subsequent dies force metal over this gap to leave a seam
on the workpiece surface. See also Cold Shut. |
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Cold saw — Mechanical sawing machine used to
produce cut pieces prior to the forging operation. Sawing is carried out
on the material at ambient temperature. |
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Cold shut — Also known as lap or fold. A
defect such as lap that forms whenever metal folds over itself during
forging. This can occur where vertical and horizontal surfaces
intersect. |
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Cold trimming — Removing flash or excess metal
from the forging in a trimming press when the forging is at room
temperature. |
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Cold working — Permanent plastic deformation
of a metal at a temperature below its recrystallization point—low enough
to produce strain hardening. Usually, but not necessarily, conducted at
room temperature. Also referred to as cold forming or cold forging.
Contrast with hot working. |
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Concavity — A concave condition applicable to
the width of any flat surface. |
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Concentricity — Adherence of part features to
a common center. |
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Controlled cooling — Cooling from an elevated
temperature in a predetermined manner to avoid hardening, cracking, or
excessive internal stresses, or to produce a desired microstructure. |
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Conventional forging — A forging characterized
by design complexity and tolerances that fall within the broad range of
general forging practice. |
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Counterblow forging — One made by equipment
incorporating two opposed rams, which simultaneously strike repeated
blows on the workpiece. |
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Counterblow forging equipment — A category of
forging equipment in which two opposed rams are activated
simultaneously, striking repeated blows on the workpiece at a midway
point. Action is vertical or horizontal. |
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Cross forging — Preliminary working of forging
stock in alternate planes, usually on flat dies, to develop mechanical
properties, particularly in the center portions of heavy sections. |
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Decarburization — The
removal of carbon from the surface of steel as a result of heating in a
medium that reacts with the carbon. Decarburization is usually present
to a slight extent in steel forgings. Excessive decarburization can
result in defective products. |
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Die holder — Also known as bolster, insert
holder, can. Used to locate, clamp and support dies, die assemblies or
die inserts. |
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Die impression — The portion of the die
surface that shapes the forging. |
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Die lubricant — A material sprayed, swabbed,
or otherwise applied during forging to reduce friction and/or provide
thermal insulation between the workpiece and the dies. Lubricants also
facilitate release of the part from the dies and provide thermal
insulation. See also Lubricant. |
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Die match — Also known as mismatch. The
alignment of the upper (moving) and lower (stationary) impression in the
die. |
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Die proof (cast) — A casting of the die
impression made to confirm the exactness of the impression. |
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Die set — The assembly of the upper and lower
die shoes (punch and die holders), usually including the guide pins,
guide pin bushings, and heel blocks. This assembly takes many forms,
shapes, and sizes and is frequently purchased as a commercially
available unit. Also, two (or, for a mechanical upsetter, three)
machined dies used together during the production of a die forging. |
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Die shift — The condition that occurs after
the dies have been set up in a forging unit in which a portion of the
impression of one die is not in perfect alignment with the corresponding
portion of the other die. This results in a mismatch in the forging, a
condition that must be held within the specified tolerance. |
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Die shoes — The upper and lower plates or
castings that constitute a die set (punch and die holder). Also a plate
or block upon which a die holder is mounted, functioning primarily as a
base for the complete die assembly. This plate or block is bolted or
clamped to the bolster plate or the face of the press ram. |
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Die sinking — The process of machining
impressions in die blocks. |
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Die straighten — A straightening operation
performed in either a hammer or a press using flat or cavity dies to
remove undesired deformation and bring the forging within the
straightness tolerance. |
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Dies (die blocks) — The metal blocks into
which forging impressions are machined and from which forgings are
produced. |
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Dies, forging — Forms for the making of
forgings; generally consist of a top and bottom die. The simplest will
form a completed forging in a single impression; the most complex, made
up of several die inserts, may have a number of impressions for the
progressive working of complicated shapes. Forging dies are usually in
pairs, with part of the impression in one of the blocks and the balance
of the impression in the other block. |
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Dies, gripper — Clamping or lateral dies used
in a forging machine or mechanical upsetter. |
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Direct (forward) extrusion — See Extrusion. |
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Directional properties — Properties whose
magnitude varies depending on the relation of the test axis to a
specific direction within the metal or alloy. |
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Disc (disk) — "Pancake" shaped forging (flat
with a round cross-section); e.g., a blank for gears, rings and flanged
hubs. Abbreviation is "D." |
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Discountinuities — Includes cracks, laps,
folds, cold shuts, and flow-through, as well as internal defects such as
inclusion, segregation, and porosity; internal discontinuities can be
detected and evaluated using ultrasonic testing equipment. |
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Double forging — A forging designed to be cut
apart and used as two separate pieces. |
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Draft — The necessary taper on the side of a
forging to allow removal from the dies; also applies to the die
impression. Commonly expressed in degrees as the draft angle. As applied
to open die forging, draft is the amount of relative movement of the
dies toward each other through the metal in one application of power. |
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Draft angle — The angle of taper, expressed in
degrees (usually 5° to 7°), given to the sides of the forging and the
side walls of the die impression. |
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Draftless forging — A forging with zero draft
on vertical walls. |
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Drawing — (1) A forging operation in which the
cross section of forging stock is reduced and the stock lengthened
between flat or simple contour dies. See also Fullering. (2) in heat
treating, the same as tempering. |
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Drawing out — The forging operation in which
the length of a metal mass (stock) is increased at the expense of its
cross section; no "upset" is involved. The operation covers converting
ingot to pressed bar using "V," round, or flat dies. |
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Dressout — A condition where the dimensions of
a part or forging are changed by local grinding or machining to remove
one or more defects thereby causing a localized imperfection of a
maximum depth. The depth is the dimension of the dressout. |
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Drifting — In forging, the operation of
forming or enlarging a hole by use of a tapered punch. |
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Drop forging — A forging made in closed or
impression dies under a drop or steam hammer. |
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Drop hammer — A term generally applied to
forging hammers wherein energy for forging is provided by gravity,
steam, or compressed air. See also Air-Lift Hammer, Board Hammer, Steam
Hammer. |
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Ductility — The property of a metal that
enables it to stretch before rupturing. |
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