NADCAP HEAT TREATING

NADCAP Heat Treating Guide

The Complete NADCAP Heat Treating Guide for Aerospace Manufacturers

NADCAP heat treating certification is one of the most important quality requirements in the aerospace manufacturing industry. For aerospace suppliers, achieving NADCAP accreditation demonstrates that heat treatment processes meet the strict quality, traceability, pyrometry, and process control standards required by major aerospace OEMs including Boeing, Lockheed Martin, Raytheon, GE Aerospace, Pratt & Whitney, and Rolls-Royce.

In aerospace manufacturing, heat treatment is not simply a thermal process — it directly determines material hardness, fatigue resistance, dimensional stability, wear resistance, fracture toughness, and long-term flight safety.

This comprehensive guide explains everything manufacturers need to know about NADCAP heat treating, including:

  • What NADCAP heat treating means
  • AC7102 audit requirements
  • AMS 2750 pyrometry compliance
  • Vacuum furnace standards
  • Temperature uniformity surveys
  • System accuracy testing
  • Documentation requirements
  • Common audit failures
  • NADCAP checklists
  • Heat treatment process control
See also  Heat Treatment Failure: Causes, Mechanisms, and Prevention

What Is NADCAP Heat Treating?

NADCAP stands for National Aerospace and Defense Contractors Accreditation Program. It is a globally recognized accreditation system developed to standardize special process quality requirements throughout the aerospace and defense industries.

Heat treatment is classified as a “special process” because its quality cannot always be fully verified through final inspection alone.

“In aerospace manufacturing, improperly heat-treated components can lead to catastrophic mechanical failure, making NADCAP process control essential.”

NADCAP heat treating accreditation verifies that a supplier:

  • Follows controlled aerospace heat treatment procedures
  • Maintains calibrated equipment
  • Meets AMS 2750 pyrometry standards
  • Performs proper process documentation
  • Uses validated heat treatment cycles
  • Maintains traceability and quality records

Why NADCAP Certification Matters

Major aerospace OEMs require NADCAP-approved suppliers because aerospace heat treatment directly affects:

  • Fatigue strength
  • Fracture toughness
  • Hardness consistency
  • Dimensional stability
  • Creep resistance
  • Corrosion resistance
  • Flight safety
Without NADCAP With NADCAP
Inconsistent process control Validated process consistency
Higher rejection rates Reduced aerospace risk
Limited aerospace approvals Access to aerospace OEM contracts
Increased audit failures Improved customer confidence
Aerospace OEM Acceptance with NADCAP Accreditation
Supplier Approval Probability Without NADCAP

What Is AC7102?

AC7102 is the primary NADCAP audit checklist for aerospace heat treating.

The checklist evaluates:

  • Heat treatment procedures
  • Pyrometry compliance
  • Operator training
  • Equipment calibration
  • Furnace maintenance
  • Temperature uniformity
  • Documentation systems
  • Process validation
See also  Heat Treatment of Zirconia

Main Sections of AC7102

Section Purpose
Quality System Document control and quality management
Pyrometry AMS 2750 compliance verification
Equipment Furnace and instrumentation validation
Process Control Cycle and atmosphere management
Testing Hardness and metallurgical verification

AMS 2750 and Pyrometry Requirements

AMS 2750 is one of the most important aerospace heat treatment standards because it governs pyrometry requirements.

Pyrometry includes:

  • Temperature measurement
  • Sensor calibration
  • Temperature uniformity surveys
  • System accuracy testing
  • Instrumentation classifications

Why AMS 2750 Matters

Improper furnace temperatures can lead to:

  • Incorrect hardness
  • Poor mechanical properties
  • Distortion
  • Retained austenite
  • Premature fatigue failure
“Even small furnace temperature variations can dramatically affect aerospace component performance.”

Temperature Uniformity Surveys (TUS)

Temperature Uniformity Surveys verify that furnace temperatures remain consistent throughout the working zone.

TUS Objectives

  • Verify furnace uniformity
  • Ensure thermal consistency
  • Prevent localized overheating
  • Validate aerospace process reliability
Furnace Class Temperature Tolerance
Class 1 ±5°F
Class 2 ±10°F
Class 3 ±15°F
Class 4 ±20°F
Class 1 Furnace — Highest Aerospace Precision
Class 3 Furnace — General Aerospace Use

System Accuracy Testing (SAT)

SAT verifies that furnace control systems accurately measure and record temperatures.

SAT Process Overview

Step 1: Compare furnace control thermocouple with certified test sensor
Step 2: Measure temperature variation
Step 3: Verify compliance with AMS 2750 limits
Step 4: Document and retain records

Furnace Instrumentation Types

Instrumentation Type Description Typical Aerospace Use
Type A Independent recording and controlling sensors Critical aerospace components
Type B Shared recording and control system General aerospace processing
Type C Limited redundancy Lower-risk applications
See also  NADCAP Heat Treating Checklist AC7102 Guide

Vacuum Furnace Requirements

Vacuum furnaces are widely used in aerospace heat treatment because they prevent oxidation and contamination.

Benefits of Vacuum Heat Treatment

  • Minimal oxidation
  • Cleaner surface finish
  • Reduced decarburization
  • Improved fatigue life
  • Better dimensional stability
  • Improved aerospace cleanliness
Vacuum Parameter Typical Requirement
Vacuum Level 10⁻⁴ to 10⁻⁵ torr
Temperature Uniformity ±5°F to ±10°F
Cooling Gas Argon or Nitrogen

Common NADCAP Heat Treating Processes

Process Purpose
Annealing Softening and stress relief
Normalizing Grain refinement
Hardening Increase hardness and strength
Tempering Reduce brittleness
Carburizing Surface hardening
Vacuum Heat Treating Oxidation-free aerospace processing
Solution Heat Treating Prepare superalloys for aging
Aging Precipitation hardening

Heat Treatment Documentation Requirements

Documentation and traceability are critical during NADCAP audits.

Required Records

  • Heat treatment cycle records
  • Calibration certificates
  • TUS reports
  • SAT reports
  • Operator training records
  • Maintenance logs
  • Material certifications
  • Process approvals
Importance of Documentation During NADCAP Audits

Common NADCAP Audit Findings

Many aerospace heat treatment suppliers fail audits because of preventable process issues.

Common Finding Risk
Expired calibrations Invalid process data
Incomplete records Loss of traceability
Improper thermocouple usage Temperature inaccuracies
Poor furnace maintenance Process instability
Unapproved procedures Audit nonconformance

NADCAP Heat Treating Checklist

Pre-Audit Checklist

  • Verify AMS 2750 compliance
  • Review TUS schedules
  • Validate SAT records
  • Check thermocouple calibration
  • Confirm furnace maintenance logs
  • Train operators
  • Update quality procedures
  • Verify process approvals

Distortion and Dimensional Stability

Aerospace components require extremely tight dimensional tolerances.

Poor heat treatment control can cause:

  • Warping
  • Growth/shrinkage
  • Residual stress
  • Gear meshing issues
  • Assembly failures

Distortion Prevention Methods

  • Controlled heating rates
  • Symmetrical fixturing
  • Vacuum gas quenching
  • Stress relieving before heat treatment
  • Uniform cooling cycles

NADCAP Heat Treating for Aerospace Materials

Material Common Aerospace Process
Inconel 718 Solution annealing and aging
9310 Steel Carburizing and hardening
Ti-6Al-4V Vacuum annealing
17-4 PH Stainless Precipitation hardening
4340 Steel Quench and temper