ULTRA
Electroless Nickel (MIL-C-26074E) (return
to services)
What
is Electroless Nickel?
Ultra Electroless Nickel High Phos. Alloys range from 10
to 12 percent phosphorus in nickel. When applied to substrates by
autocatalytic chemical reduction, Electroless Nickel becomes a uniform,
hard, and highly corrosion and wear resistant surface. Because there
is no current involved in the deposition reaction, there are no
current density build up concerns. The deposit is uniform all over;
on corners, recesses, IDs and ODs, keeping tolerances uniform and
eliminating the need for finish grinding in most cases.
Ultra Electroless Nickel Alloy Applications:
Grade Al: A premium high-phosphorus deposit which
provides outstanding corrosion resistance (> 500 hrs., salt spray
test). Hardness up to 65 Rockwell C after heat treatment. It provides
excellent performance when used on cylinders, dies and critical
parts. Meets specification requirements for MIL-C-26074, AMS 2404,
ASTM B-656, ASTM B-7333, ISO 4227, GMW 3059 and Ford WSS-M99P9999A1.
Grade A2: A co-deposit of grade Al electroless nickel and
PTFE (12-15% by weight). The PTFE is uniformly dispersed throughout
the electroless nickel matrix to provide continual lubricity where
friction is a problem.
Contact our service department for more information regarding your
specific application of Ultra Electroless Nickel.
EN Use in Multi-layer Applications
Ultra Electroless Nickel has proven very successful in
multi-layer plating applications where severe corrosion and abrasion
problems exist. The Electroless Nickel/Hard Chrome/LRC combination
unites to protect the substrate in the most severe environments.
Click here to download the Military Plating
Specifications PDF
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