AS556
Well-known member
Seems like it would be ideal for tools. Pliers, wrenches, sockets etc.
What gives? This treatment is widely used in many other industries.
What gives? This treatment is widely used in many other industries.
Easy: One, because it's expensive. The cheap coating you see on Home-Depot drill bits and the like is literally like nanometers thick. It's basically just there for the color.
Doing a proper TiNitride job is expensive, considerably more so than nickel or chrome.
And two, TiNitride isn't rustproof. Steel can and will still rust through it.
Doc.
Salt bath nitriding is more expensive than plating. It is also a high temperature process. That means the base metal is softer due to tempering. In addition the surface of the metal is infused with nitrogen which embrittles the steel. Combine that with added flex due to high temperature tempering and you have a formula for failed tools.
SBN/QPQ is performed at 750-1050 F. It has been used in the firearm industry for decades as an external coating to help with corrosion and to coat rifle barrels to help improve wear characteristics. Firearms, rifles in particular experience extreme pressure changes, some as high as 64,000 PSI that induce some flex and they do not fail due to "high temperature tempering."
Nitride treatment is used to impart a very hard wear surface and wouldn’t be that great an option for many hand tools. Something like a pliers Joint would last very long with that treatment.