Calculate required soak time for heat treatment processes including hardening, tempering, annealing, and stress relief. Supports common steel alloys and custom materials.
The Heat Treatment Soak Time Calculator determines the hold time at temperature for common heat treatment processes: hardening (austenitizing), tempering, annealing, and stress relief. Proper soak time ensures the entire workpiece reaches uniform temperature and the desired metallurgical transformation completes throughout the cross-section.
Soak time depends on the section thickness, material, process type, and furnace characteristics. A general rule for hardening carbon steel is 1 hour per inch of cross-section, but alloy steels, tool steels, and special processes require different calculations. Too short a soak leaves an untransformed core; too long a soak causes grain growth, excessive decarburization, or oxidation.
Enter the workpiece dimensions, material type, and heat treatment process to calculate the recommended soak time, ramp rate, and total furnace cycle time. It is a practical starting point before you load parts into the furnace. That helps you plan the furnace schedule before the batch is committed. It keeps the heat cycle aligned with the part size instead of relying on a rule of thumb.
Calculate precise soak times for metallurgical processes. Avoid under- or over-treatment that leads to soft spots, grain growth, decarburization, or wasted energy. That helps you hit the target temperature without guessing the hold time. It also keeps the cycle practical for production planning and helps you line up furnace time with the workpiece thickness.
Hardening: Soak = Base Time × Thickness Factor × Material Factor. Carbon Steel: 1 hr/inch + 15 min at thickness. Alloy Steel: 1.2 hr/inch + 15 min. Tool Steel: 1.5 hr/inch + 20 min. Tempering: typically 1 hr/inch minimum, 2 hr/inch for tool steels. Stress Relief: 1 hr/inch at temperature after full soak.
Result: Soak: 3 hours 45 minutes at 1550°F
4140 alloy steel, 3" round section. Base: 1.2 hr/inch × 3" = 3.6 hr. Round factor (0.9): 3.24 hr. Add 15 min: 3.49 hr ≈ 3 hr 30 min. Austenitize at 1525-1575°F. Ramp to temperature: ~1.5 hr. Total furnace cycle: ~5 hours.
Hardening (austenitizing + quenching) transforms steel to martensite for maximum hardness. Tempering (reheating after hardening) reduces brittleness and adjusts hardness. Annealing (slow cooling from above critical temperature) softens steel for machining. Normalizing (air cooling from above critical) refines grain structure. Stress relieving (subcritical temperatures) reduces residual stresses without microstructural changes.
Plain carbon steels (1040-1095): 1 hr/inch, austenitize 1450-1550°F. Alloy steels (4140, 4340, 8620): 1-1.2 hr/inch, austenitize 1500-1600°F. Tool steels (D2, A2, O1): 1.5 hr/inch, austenitize 1750-1850°F. High-speed steels (M2, T1): preheat at 1500°F, austenitize 2150-2250°F, 2-5 min/inch at final temperature. Stainless (410, 440C): 1 hr/inch, austenitize 1850-1950°F.
Rapid heating causes thermal stress (surface expands while core is cool), which can crack complex or large parts. General ramp rates: carbon steel 400°F/hr, alloy 300°F/hr, tool steel 200°F/hr (or slower with preheats at 1000°F and 1500°F). High-speed steels use a 3-stage preheat protocol. Parts with sharp geometry changes (holes, keyways, thin/thick transitions) are most susceptible to thermal cracking.
Soak time at temperature ensures the entire cross-section reaches the required temperature and completes the metallurgical phase transformation. Under-soaking leaves untransformed ferrite in the core (soft spots after hardening). Over-soaking causes grain growth, decarburization, and oxidation wastage.
The austenitizing temperature depends on the steel alloy: plain carbon steels 1450-1550°F, alloy steels 1500-1600°F, tool steels 1750-2050°F, stainless steels 1850-2100°F. It must be above the Ac3 (upper critical) temperature to fully transform ferrite to austenite for complete hardening.
Heat must conduct from the surface to the center. A 6" section takes roughly 4× longer than a 3" section (not 2×, because heat conduction goes as thickness squared for uniform soak). Thicker sections also have higher risk of thermal stress and cracking during heating and cooling.
Stress relief (typically 1000-1200°F for steel) reduces residual stresses from machining, welding, or forming without significantly changing mechanical properties. Tempering (300-1200°F, post-hardening) reduces brittleness and adjusts hardness/toughness balance. They use similar soak time rules but different temperatures.
Oxidizing atmospheres (air) cause scale and decarburization. Endothermic gas atmospheres protect the surface. Vacuum and nitrogen are cleanest but most expensive. Protective atmosphere adds 0-10% to soak time vs. air furnaces. Critical for tool steels and precision parts.
High-speed steels and some tool steels require 2-3 tempering cycles (with cooling to room temperature between). Each cycle is typically 2 hours at temperature. Multiple tempers convert retained austenite and further stabilize the microstructure. Total tempering time may be 6-8 hours.