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Stress Relieving

Prepare parts for secondary machining or final use by enhancing dimensional stability and bringing the metal to equilibrium.

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What is stress relieving in metals?

Stress in metals can be introduced by the smelting process, by fabrication methods such as rolling, by manufacturing operations like machining, stamping, and fineblanking, and even by heat treatment processes. 

All of these operations cause movement in the microstructure of the part, resulting in crystal dislocations that require stress relief to correct. 

Stress relieving can be conducted at various times during the manufacturing process or throughout the part’s life. For parts requiring tight tolerances, stress relief is often performed prior to finish machining to create more predictable and repeatable results in the finished part’s geometry. Stress relief can also be performed prior to heat treatment to minimize distortion in the resulting parts. Additionally, for tooling like high pressure die casting dies, stress relief can be performed periodically as part of ongoing maintenance.

Benefits of Stress Relieving

Dimensional Stability

If stresses aren’t relieved by thermal processing, then parts are more likely to become distorted while they are in application. The greater dimensional stability imparted by stress relieving helps components hold their tolerances when they are in use. Application stress by hot service temperatures and high impact loads can compound the residual stresses inside a part if they are not relieved via heat treatment prior to the part entering service.

Enhanced Machinability

Components that have tight tolerances, especially those we encounter in the aerospace, automotive, and medical markets, rely on stress relieving to make precision machining possible. Eliminating the crystal dislocations inside the part’s structure makes fine cutting operations more consistent and predictable.

Longer Part Life

Stress relieved parts are less likely to crack or deform while they are in their application, allowing them to last longer.

The Stress Relieving Heat Treatment Process

For most carbon steel and cast iron parts, stress-relief heat treating is the uniform heating of a structure to a temperature below the austenitic transformation range. After holding the parts at the stress relieving temperature, we take them through controlled cooling. Stress can be reintroduced if parts are allowed to cool too quickly. This is especially critical for larger components that naturally cool at a faster rate on the outside when compared to the core of the part.

Types of Stress Relieving Heat Treatment

Depending on your desired results, there are two main methods of stress relieving to choose from to process your metal parts. 

Vacuum Stress Relief

If bright, clean parts are of concern for your application, stress relieving in a vacuum furnace (offered in our Kansas City, St. Louis, Nashville, and Cleveland divisions) may be your best choice. The lack of atmosphere in the furnace prevents scale from forming during heat treatment. Also, if your parts require temperatures in excess of 1,650°F, these ranges can only be achieved in vacuum equipment. For ultra-high precision components, we often see stress relieving specifications call for temperatures as high as 2,050°F. 

Air Stress Relief

Air stress relief is conducted in a tempering furnace. When stress relieving parts that have not been heat treated, processing at the highest possible temperature will yield the best results. For through hardened parts, the maximum stress relieving temperature is typically 50°F below the tempering temperature; for example, for H13 tool steel that is tempered at 1,100°F, we will process it at up to 1,050°F to relieve residual stress that formed during manufacturing or heat treatment.

Deep Cryogenics for Aluminum

Aluminum parts are typically stress relieved by subjecting them to extremely low temperatures through cryogenics. As temperatures decrease toward absolute zero, the crystals in the metal structure become smaller, which makes dislocations mobile and decreases stress inside the part.

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Stress Relieving FAQs

Can I just temper my parts instead of stress relieving them? +

Tempering and stress relieving can involve identical time and temperature parameters, but the distinction lies in prior processing. Tempering specifically follows quenching/hardening to reduce brittleness and adjust hardness. Stress relieving is done on parts that haven’t been hardened—it’s purely for reducing manufacturing stresses. If your parts are already hardened, you’d temper them; if not hardened, you’d stress relieve them. If parts have been hardened and tempered, stress relieving after this will further reduce the parts’ hardness and strength.

How can I minimize stress in my parts? +

Beyond stress relieving, consider these strategies: select pre-stress relieved or normalized materials when possible, minimize aggressive machining passes, use balanced material removal (alternating sides), avoid sharp corners in design, and maintain consistent cross-sections. For critical applications, incorporate stress relief between roughing and finishing operations. For parts seeing multiple manufacturing steps, consider intermediate stress reliefs to prevent cumulative stress buildup.

Should I stress relieve before hardening my parts? +

It depends on the material’s condition. For pre-hardened materials like pre-hardened 4140, stress relieving before re-hardening can be beneficial. However, for unhardened materials, it may be a good idea to skip stress relieving before hardening—you’ll create movement during stress relief, then more movement during hardening, compounding distortion. The hardening process itself will relieve most prior stresses.

What is stress relieving in heat treatment? +

Stress relieving is a thermal process that reduces internal stresses in metal parts caused by machining, forming, welding, or other manufacturing operations. Parts are heated to temperatures below the material’s critical transformation point (typically 1100-1200°F for alloy steels) and then slowly cooled. This process minimizes distortion risks in subsequent operations and improves dimensional stability.

What's the difference between stress relieving and annealing? +

While both processes involve heating and controlled cooling, they serve different purposes. Stress relieving operates at lower temperatures to reduce internal stresses without changing the material’s microstructure or mechanical properties. Annealing uses higher temperatures (often above 1600°F) to soften the material completely, making it more machinable or formable. Think of stress relieving as tension relief, while annealing is a complete softening reset.

When should I stress relieve before nitriding or FNC? +

Stress relieving before nitriding/FNC is highly recommended and should follow this sequence: rough machine → stress relieve at a temperature above your nitriding temperature → finish machine → nitride/FNC. This ensures all stress-induced movement occurs before final machining, and the stress relief temperature won’t affect the subsequent nitriding process.

Will my parts be clean or have scale after stress relieving? +

Surface condition depends on the atmosphere used. Standard stress relieving in air furnaces will produce some oxidation and discoloration—expect a scaled appearance. For parts requiring clean, bright surfaces, Paulo offers vacuum stress relieving at our Nashville, St. Louis, Kansas City, and Cleveland facilities. Vacuum processing prevents oxidation, maintaining your parts’ surface finish.

Will my parts move or distort during stress relieving? +

Yes, dimensional changes are expected. When internal stresses are relieved, the material relaxes, causing movement proportional to the stress level present. This is why the recommended sequence is: rough machine → stress relieve → finish machine → harden and temper. The stress relief captures the movement before final dimensions are established.

Will stress relieving reduce my parts' hardness? +

Hardness changes depend on the relationship between your stress relieving temperature and any prior tempering temperature. If stress relieving at or below the original tempering temperature, hardness remains unchanged. If stress relieving temperature exceeds the prior tempering temperature, some hardness reduction can be expected.

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