Cold-formed tank head for railroad tank car
09771630 ยท 2017-09-26
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B61D5/08
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B21D31/005
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B21D51/18
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B21D19/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C21D9/0068
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
International classification
C21D9/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B21D19/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B21D51/18
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A method of manufacturing a railroad car tank head includes the steps of providing a circular blank of steel plate material, cold-forming the circular blank to form an intermediate ellipsoidal dish, cold-forming a peripheral flange region of the intermediate ellipsoidal dish to form a flanged ellipsoidal dish, and heat treating the flanged ellipsoidal dish. The heat treatment may be either a thermal stress relieving heat treatment or a normalizing heat treatment. The two cold-forming steps may be carried out at room temperature. The present invention provides a method of making a railroad car tank head that is more efficient than prior methods, avoids the challenges of hot-forming and single-stage cold-forming, is easily adaptable to different tank head diameters using the same forming equipment, and yields a railroad car tank head that meets safety standards.
Claims
1. A method of manufacturing a plurality of railroad car tank heads comprising the steps of: providing a plurality of circular blanks of steel plate material, wherein the steel plate material is at least inches thick; simultaneously cold forming the plurality of circular blanks to form a plurality of intermediate ellipsoidal dishes, wherein a temperature of each blank is not greater than 200 F. during the cold-forming; cold-forming a peripheral flange region of each intermediate ellipsoidal dish to form a flanged ellipsoidal dish, wherein a temperature of each intermediate ellipsoidal dish is not greater than 200 F. during the cold-forming of the flange region; and heat treating each flanged ellipsoidal dish, wherein the step of heat treating includes thermally stress relieving each flanged ellipsoidal dish at a temperature below the normalization temperature of the steel plate material by heating each flanged ellipsoidal dish to 1150 F.50 F. and holding each flanged ellipsoidal dish at 1150 F.50 F. for at least one hour.
2. The method according to claim 1, wherein the steel plate material is AAR TC128, Grade B, normalized steel.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein the step of cold-forming the plurality of circular blanks is performed by an automatic dishing press system.
4. The method of claim 1, further comprising the step of monitoring the temperature of the steel in conjunction with the step of cold-forming the peripheral flange region of each intermediate ellipsoidal dish.
5. The method of claim 4, wherein the step of cold-forming the peripheral flange region of each intermediate ellipsoidal dish is temporarily paused to allow cooling of the steel, whereby the temperature of the steel is maintained at or below a predetermined limit.
6. The method of claim 1, wherein the step of heat treating each flanged ellipsoidal dish includes normalizing each flanged ellipsoidal dish.
7. A method of manufacturing a railroad car tank head comprising the steps of: providing a circular blank of steel plate material, wherein the steel plate material is at least inches thick; cold-forming the circular blank to form an intermediate ellipsoidal dish, wherein a temperature of the blank is not greater than 200 F. during the cold-forming; cold-forming a peripheral flange region of the intermediate ellipsoidal dish to form a flanged ellipsoidal dish, wherein a temperature of the intermediate ellipsoidal dish is not greater than 200 F. during the cold-forming of the flange region; and heat treating the flanged ellipsoidal dish, wherein the step of heat treating includes thermally stress relieving the flanged ellipsoidal dish at a temperature below the normalization temperature of the steel plate material by heating the flanged ellipsoidal dish to 1150 F.50 F. and holding the flanged ellipsoidal dish at 1150 F.50 F. for at least one hour.
8. The method of claim 7, wherein the flanged ellipsoidal dish is held at 1150 F.50 F. for up to four hours.
9. The method of claim 7, wherein the step of thermally stress relieving the flanged ellipsoidal dish further includes cooling the heated flanged ellipsoidal dish at a controlled rate of cooling not exceeding 500 F./hr.
10. The method of claim 9, wherein the step of thermally stress relieving the flanged ellipsoidal dish further includes cooling the heated flanged ellipsoidal dish in still air.
11. The method of claim 7, wherein the step of thermally stress relieving the flanged ellipsoidal dish is performed before the flanged ellipsoidal dish is welded onto a cylindrical tank.
12. The method of claim 7, wherein the step of thermally stress relieving the flanged ellipsoidal dish is performed after the flanged ellipsoidal dish is welded onto a cylindrical tank.
13. The method of claim 7, wherein the step of heat treating the flanged ellipsoidal dish includes normalizing the flanged ellipsoidal dish.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The nature and mode of operation of the present invention will now be more fully described in the following detailed description of the invention taken with the accompanying drawing figures, in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
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(12) As an initial step indicated at block 12, a circular blank of steel plate material is provided. The circular blank, shown in
(13) Returning to
(14) Applicant has experimented with stacking two circular blanks 30 on an automatic dishing press and cold-forming two intermediate ellipsoidal dishes simultaneously. This procedure was successful in producing two intermediate ellipsoidal dishes 50 in approximately half the time it takes to produce a single intermediate ellipsoidal dish 50 when only one circular blank 30 is loaded in the automatic dishing press.
(15) The second cold-forming stage, represented by block 16, is cold-forming a peripheral flange region of the intermediate ellipsoidal dish 50 to form a flanged ellipsoidal dish 70. The second stage of cold-forming may be performed by an automatic flanging machine, illustrated schematically in
(16) During the second stage of cold-forming, frictional contact between rollers 58 and 60 and the spinning dish 50 is converted to heat that raises the temperature of the steel. If the steel is heated above 200 F., unexpected material deformation may occur. Therefore, the temperature of the steel is monitored in conjunction with rotating dish 50. In
(17) The dimensions of flanged ellipsoidal dish 70 will depend on the diameter of the railroad car tank for which the tank car head is intended. Purely by way of example, applicant has successfully tested its method in meeting a railroad tank head specification calling for an outer diameter (OD) of 123.5 inches, an overall height H of 34.251 inches, and a flange height F of 2.625 inches. While the flanged ellipsoidal dish 70 is loaded in flanging machine 52, an edge conditioning operation may be run using a shaving tool positioned to shave the top edge of flange region 72 to achieve a desired flatness tolerance of flange region. The edge conditioning operation prepares flanged ellipsoidal dish 70 for welding to an end of a cylindrical tank by a circumferential weld.
(18) Once the flanging stage is complete, the flanged ellipsoidal dish 70 is heat treated as represented by block 24 in
(19) The thermal stress relieve procedure involves heat treating the flanged ellipsoidal dish at a temperature below the normalization temperature of the steel plate material. In an embodiment of the invention, thermal stress relieving is conducted by placing the flanged ellipsoidal dish 70 into a furnace set at not more than 800 F., ramping the furnace temperature up to 1150 F. at a rate not exceeding 400 F./hr, holding the furnace temperature at 1150 F.50 F. for a minimum of one hour up to four hours, gradually cooling the furnace back down to 400 F. at a cooling rate not exceeding 500 F./hr, then cooling the flanged ellipsoidal dish 70 in still air. For dtress relieving, the flanged dish 70 may be supported on a fixture with the concave portion of the dish facing downward. The fixture may include internal piers and circumferential shims configured to maintain dimensional stability of the flanged dish 70, and to allow uniform heat flow to all portions of the flanged dish for uniform heating of the steel.
(20) In the thermal stress relieve procedure described above, the holding time is increased relative to conventional stress relieve procedures, which typically call for a holding time of one hour per inch of thickness (i.e. about half an hour for a 9/16 inch thick dish). The thermal stress relieve re-establishes good ductile to brittle impact characteristics of the cold-formed material at an equivalent level to that derived from normalizing heat treatment. In order to achieve this conclusion, the applicant conducted tests varying the holding time at one-hour increments (one, two, three and four hours). Applicant has found that the holding time greatly affects the material's ability to absorb impact energy, as measured by the Charpy impact test. This aspect is critical in tank car heads, as discussed above in relation to the specifications in AAR M-1002.
(21) The stress relieving step may be performed before the flanged ellipsoidal dish 70 is welded onto an end of a cylindrical tank, or it may be performed after such welding. For example, an entire welded tank of the railroad tank, including a pair of flanged ellipsoidal dishes 70 at opposite ends, may be stress relieved after fabrication and welding. In this case, thermally stress relieving the tank head before welding it to the tank body may not be required.
(22) As mentioned, heat treatment step 24 in
(23) While the invention has been described in connection with exemplary embodiments, the detailed description is not intended to limit the scope of the invention to the particular forms set forth. The invention is intended to cover such alternatives, modifications and equivalents of the described embodiment as may be included within the spirit and scope of the invention.