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Evaluate Materials with Eddy Current |
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Eddy-current technology has
become an important contributor to quality
assurance for the
automotive industry.
BY BILL BUSCHUR

An eddy current system can test a variety of
parts and materials.
Photo: ibg NDT Systems Corp. |
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The rapid
growth in performance requirements of modern
automobiles and trucks has brought about a more
stringent demand for quality control of
automotive materials and com pennants.
Eddy-current inspection can be an effective way
to ensure these requirements are met.
Primary applications are nondestructive
verification of material properties resulting
from heat treatment and alloy processes and
detection of surface cracks and flaws resulting
from rolling, forming, machining and finishing
and heat-treat processes.
Material
property testing
Modern eddy current instruments that use digital
electronics to nondestructively test material
properties are reliable, repeatable, |
curves for the alloy and
structural characteristics of the parts. A
minimum of 15 to 20 parts are necessary to
provide a sufficiently broad statistical base of
allowable production variables. At each test
frequency, the scatter of readings is displayed
and tolerance zones are created to
encompass readings at selected frequencies.
Size, shape and position of each tolerance zone
is established, calculated and drawn by the
computer. In production use, parts are tested at
up to eight selected frequencies. Parts are only
accepted if the measured values meet each and
every tolerance zone. If the part fails to meet
just one criterion, it is rejected. The
principal advantage of this method is that a
variety of metallurgical anomalies may be
detected; hardness variations may be detected at
1 kilohertz (kHz), material mix austenite,
intemperate marten-site, beanie, |
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Display of test using eight frequencies (25 Hz
to 25 kHz).Photo: ibg NDT Systems Corp. |

Tolerance zone encompasses scatter of data at 25
Hz test frequency. Photo: ibg NDT Systems Corp. |
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have high resolution, and are easy
to implement and maintain. Properly applied,
multi-frequency test protocols extend the scope
of the eddy current method, increase test
reliability and make the method easy to
implement.
Determination of optimum setup and calibration
procedure is facilitated by a built-in computer.
During calibration, parts known to be
metallurgic ally correct are tested at a
multitude of frequencies, producing locus |
partite and ferrite in
their various combinations. Electronic
processing technologies have reduced testing
time. Typically, a part can be tested at eight
different frequencies in less than 100
milliseconds (0.1 second). may better be
determined at 12.5 kHz, case depth at 20 hertz
(Hz) or decarburization at 63 kHz. Most
important, unexpected mixed structures from
significant heat-treat process errors are
detected and sorted from production. Unwanted
mixed structures include retained |
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Surface flaw and crack testing
Use of the eddy current method to
detect cracks, pores and other surface flaws in
critical automotive components is increasing because it is reliable,
repeatable, easily automated and pro-vides cost savings over magnetic particle and other methods. It is particularly
applicable to test finished machined
parts, although there are many applications on as-formed parts.
Eddy-current instrumentation for
crack detection functions differently
than eddy current material properties
testing. It is best characterized as high-speed, high-precision surface scanning.
A probe that sequentially senses small
sections of the surface-a 1 millimeter
or less diameter area-must be moved
over the surface area with high precision
to reliably detect small cracks and flaws.
High precision means that the probe orientation to, and distance from, the metal
surface being tested must be maintained
within prescribed tolerances. Also, the
rotation rate of the part being tested and
the scan rate of the probe must be monitored (error proofed) so to guarantee
that the surface area is completely
scanned with no skipped areas.
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A technician works on a semi-automatic sorting
line for velocity joint spindles. |
Testing critical parts
at the factory
Eddy current instruments
can be effectively introduced into production
lines to provide semi-
automated or fully automated 100% testing. Test
decisions are clear cut. The
human factor is eliminated. An example is the
testing of safety critical automotive components such
as velocity joint spindles.
In this application, forged parts are subject to
final
inspection for material mix and heat treatment
prior to shipment. An eddy-current sorting unit,
operating in the preventive multi- |
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frequency method, is used. Parts are
manually
placed into a fixed coil with centering provided
by a wear proof plastic insert to protect the
coil from damage. The presence of the part in the coil is automatically
sensed to initiate
the test cycle. If the part meets all criteria,
it is accepted and a
slide gate opens below the coil to allow
transfer to the shipping container. If any criteria are not met, the
gate remains
closed and an audible alarm and red indicator
lamp are initiated. The reject part has to be moved by the
operator. Testing
can be resumed after canceling the alarm. |
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The bottom coil lifts the
test part into the top stationary coil on top. |
The I.D. crack detection
probe in its protected home position awaits the
next test part. |
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Two crack-detection probes
scan the outer diameter for surface flaws. |
An automatic eddy current test system for
nuts. |
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Measurements are performed
at eight frequencies ranging from 25Hz to 25
kHz. Variations in heat treatment and material
alloy are detected.
In another example, ball races in hubs are 100%
inspected to verify correct hardness, case depth
and hardness/case depth location from induction
hardening. The automatic, in-line test also
verifies correct tempering of base material and
use of correct alloy. Parts fed by conveyor
belts into the test system are tested by two
inside diameter (I.D.) test coils, one coil for
each ball race.
Eddy current is also being used to test
cast-iron cylinder liners for cracks. Prior to
shipment, the system scans both outside diameter
and inside diameter cylindrical surface areas to
detect cracks and surface open pores. This is
automatically done at a throughput rate of 400
parts per hour.
Another company uses eddy current to inspect
tempered nuts. Nuts are high-volume parts in
automatic automotive assembly lines. If nuts are
of incorrect material or incorrectly tempered,
and therefore too brittle, the consequences can
be severe. The eddy current system had to test
up to 180 nuts per minute to verify correct
tempering and the use of the correct alloy.
Parts fed from a bowl feeder into a rotary
indexing table are pressed over a flat test coil
where the heat treat and alloy are verified. If
approved, a sorting gate is activated. If
defective, the gate is not activated and the
parts go to the reject bin. Additionally, at a
separate station, the presence of the thread is
checked with a test probe that is inserted into
the nut.
These examples demonstrate that modern, digital
eddy current instruments specifically designed
to test automotive components can be reliably
used to reduce production and testing costs,
while increasing components integrity and moving
toward zero defects for component material
properties and for surface flaws and racks. |
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