Stress Relief for Cast Iron: When & How to Specify (+ Normalizing)
Guided by YB Metal (Suzhou, China) — stress relief for cast iron: gray/grey & ductile iron castings with simulation-led gating, in-house machining, controlled heat treatment, and traceable QA.
Excerpt: This guide shows when to use stress relief for cast iron and when to step up to normalizing. You’ll get process windows (temperatures & hold times), section-size limits, hardness/size change expectations, warpage controls, and copy-paste RFQ notes.
Table of contents
Stress relief vs normalizing — what’s the difference
Selection matrix (when to use which)
Process windows by material (gray vs ductile)
Dimensional change & hardness — what to expect
Warpage control: fixtures, ramps, and size checks
Drawing & RFQ notes (paste-ready)
Inspection & documentation plan
FAQs
Stress relief vs normalizing — what’s the difference
Stress relief: Low-temperature soak that reduces residual casting/machining stresses with minimal microstructure change. Typical result: distortion risk drops; hardness and tensile stay near as-cast.
Normalizing: High-temperature austenitize + air cool to a more uniform pearlitic matrix. Typical result: higher hardness/strength, better dimensional stability for machining, and more consistent properties across sections.
Selection matrix — when to use which
Table A — Heat treatment choice by scenario
Scenario
Choose Stress Relief
Choose Normalizing
Parts warp after rough machining
✅ First
Leak-tight housings drifting flatness after assembly torque
✅
Need higher strength/wear than as-cast
✅
Mixed microstructure across sections (soft/hard patches)
✅
Thin ribs next to thick bosses (residual stress risk)
✅
✅ (if property uniformity also needed)
PPAP/FAI dimensional stability before finish machining
✅
✅ (per property target)
Process windows by material (practical ranges)
Indicative shop ranges; confirm with your foundry/heat treater for your section size and chemistry.
Table B — Stress relief windows
Material
Temperature °C (°F)
Hold time*
Cool
Notes
Gray/grey iron
500–600°C (932–1112°F)
1–2 h + ~1 h per 25 mm (1 in) section
Still air
Minimizes microstructure change; good for housings/frames
Ductile iron (A536)
525–650°C (977–1202°F)
1–2 h + ~1 h per 25 mm (1 in)
Still air
Stay ≤650°C to avoid nodularity/matrix shifts
*Rule of thumb; very massive parts may require longer soaks.
Only slightly. Its goal is distortion control, not property change; expect small hardness increases at most.
When you need more uniform hardness/strength, or when a mixed microstructure causes inconsistent machining or field behavior.
No. Use HT when the risk/cost of distortion or property scatter justifies it—see the selection matrix.
If overheated or soaked too long near austenitizing temperatures. Stay in the 525–650°C band for stress relief and ~880–920°C for normalizing with proper control.
Rough guide is 1 hour per inch (25 mm) of effective section at temp, plus controlled ramps and air cool.
CTA — heat treat with proof, not promises
YBmetal delivers stress-relieved and normalized iron castings with documented process control so engineering and SQE can sign off fast.
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