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Old 10-28-2012, 12:33 PM   #1
Marty Buth
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Default Re: cam/lifter rockwell ?

Nitriding usually yields a hardness that you can't dig into with a 62 rockwell C file.
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Old 10-28-2012, 01:38 PM   #2
Alan Roehrich
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Default Re: cam/lifter rockwell ?

Where on the cam did they perform the Rockwell test?
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Old 10-28-2012, 06:27 PM   #3
Terry Cain
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Default Re: cam/lifter rockwell ?

One more question. Is it a Crane cam?
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Old 10-31-2012, 05:06 PM   #4
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Default Re: cam/lifter rockwell ?

I assume the test was on the actual lobes, more than that i was not told. the brake-in was with the single outer spring. [dual spring pressure was in the area of 150 seat. personally i would have used a lower pressure for the brake-in, because the springs had to come off any but.....]
yes roller rockers and it was a lunati [sp] solid lifter.
anyway the cam tested low on the rockwell. so Andy is really ticked off.
thanks for the help.
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Old 11-01-2012, 09:54 AM   #5
Reed Granrt
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Default Re: cam/lifter rockwell ?

All flat tappet, whether hydraulic or mechanical, are case hardened. Most are nitrided by one of several methods. This nitriding is only a coverage of the camshaft. It means it can only go so deep. Once a cam starts to wear and it goes thru the nitriding, or case hardening, we then get down to virgin metal. You should be able to check the camshaft at any place, except the one that failed, on the camshaft. Checking the cam at the failed lobe is of no good at all. If the lobe is lost, you have broken thru the hardening. You are much more accurate to check a ground surface. You probably would be better to read it in Rockwell C as more people understand that scale. The nitriding procedure has to be formulized to treat the exact kind of metal you have. Steel is treated differently that cast iron. If you are reading in the 30's on a good lobe, then most likely it was not nitrided or something was wrong in the process (screwed up). I was involved in gas nitriding 100's of thousands of parts for several years. You can solution nitride or gas nitride. Advantages and disadvantages to both. Speed is one of them.
my 1.5 cents worth. Oops wait, that has gone down to .5 cents(inflation)
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