E-Book Overview
10th ed. John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2008. 1031 p. — ISBN-13: 978-0470-05512-0
E. Paul DeGarmo wanted a book that explained to engineers how the things they designed are made. DeGarmo’s Materials and Processes in Manufacturing is still written providing a broad, basic introduction to the fundamentals of manufacturing.The book begins with a survey of engineering materials, the stuff that manufacturing begins with, and seeks to provide the basic information that can be used to match the properties of a material to the service requirements of a component. A variety of engineering materials are presented, along with their properties and means of modifying them. The materials section can be used in curricula that lack preparatory courses in metallurgy, materials science, or strength of materials, or where the student has not yet been exposed to those topics. In addition, various chapters in this section can be used as supplements to a basic materials course, providing additional information on topics such as heat treatment, plastics, composites, and material selection.Each section begins with a presentation of the fundamentals on which those processes are based. This is followed by a discussion of the various process alternatives, which can be selected to operate individually or be combined into an integrated system.<strong>Chapters:Introduction to DeGarmo’s Materials and Processes in ManufacturingProperties of MaterialsNature of Metals and AlloysEquilibrium Phase Diagrams and the Iron–Carbon SystemHeat TreatmentFerrous Metals and AlloysNonferrous Metals and AlloysNonmetallic Materials: Plastics, Elastomers, Ceramics, and CompositesMaterial SelectionMeasurement and Inspection and TestingFundamentals of CastingExpendable-Mold Casting ProcessesMultiple-Use-Mold Casting ProcessesFabrication of Plastics, Ceramics, and CompositesFundamentals of Metal FormingBulk Forming ProcessesSheet-Forming ProcessesPowder MetallurgyElectronic Electrochemical Chemical and Thermal Machining ProcessesFundamentals of Machining/Orthogonal MachiningCutting Tools for MachiningTurning and Boring ProcessesDrilling and Related Hole-Making ProcessesMillingWorkholding Devices for Machine ToolsNumerical Control (NC) and the A(4) Level of AutomationOther Machining ProcessesAbrasive Machining ProcessesThread and Gear ManufacturingFundamentals of JoiningSurface EngineeringQuality Engineering
E-Book Content
DEGA-FM-i-xvi-hr 1/17/07 1:51 PM Page x DEGA-FM-i-xvi-hr 1/17/07 1:51 PM Page i DeGarmo’s MATERIALS AND PROCESSES IN MANUFACTURING TENTH EDITION DEGA-FM-i-xvi-hr 1/17/07 1:51 PM Page ii DEGA-FM-i-xvi-hr 1/17/07 1:51 PM Page iii DeGarmo’s MATERIALS AND PROCESSES IN MANUFACTURING TENTH EDITION J T. Black Auburn University-Emeritus Ronald A. Kohser University of Missouri–Rolla John Wiley & Sons, Inc DEGA-FM-i-xvi-hr2 2/1/07 1:55 PM Page iv Cover photos: The sketchbooks of Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519) contain two drawings that are of particular interest to the authors of this text. One is a crude sketch of an underwater device, or submarine, with the elongated sausage shape characteristic of many later day successes. The other, reproduced on the cover of this edition, is a “flying-machine,” that bears an uncanny resemblance to a modern-day helicopter. Unlike many of Leonardo’s creations, he apparently made no attempt to further refine the concepts, since there was never a subsequent sketch of either. Was this man really such a genius? We have no way of knowing,