XTMIM’s inspection and testing capability supports MIM part validation from drawing review to shipment release. For supplier quality engineers, product engineers, and technical buyers, the key question is not whether a factory claims “quality control,” but whether it can define critical dimensions, choose suitable measurement methods, verify material-related requirements, identify process-related risks, and document inspection evidence before sample approval or production release. XTMIM supports dimensional, mechanical, material-related, surface, reliability-related, and shipment inspection planning for MIM projects.
In MIM production, final part quality is affected by feedstock behavior, injection molding stability, green part handling, debinding, sintering shrinkage, tooling compensation, post-sintering sizing, surface finishing, and final inspection. The inspection plan is project-dependent and should be confirmed according to the drawing, critical dimensions, material grade, surface finish, application environment, customer acceptance criteria, and reporting requirements. Not every project requires every test.
치수 검사재료 시험 지원Surface & Reliability ChecksInspection ReportsProduction Release Review
Inspection and Testing Capability for MIM Supplier Evaluation
Inspection for MIM parts should be planned around the part drawing, not around a fixed checklist. A small stainless steel hinge component, a soft magnetic part, a low alloy steel locking component, and a cosmetic wearable part may all require different inspection priorities. Some projects focus on datum-based dimensions and mating surfaces. Others require hardness verification, material-related testing, roughness checks, corrosion-related testing, or appearance review.
XTMIM’s inspection support covers dimensional, mechanical, material, surface, and reliability-related testing resources, including CMMs, optical measuring machines, 3D scanning, hardness testers, tensile testers, metallographic equipment, roughness testers, salt spray testers, and environmental test chambers. The exact inspection plan should be confirmed according to the drawing, critical dimensions, material grade, surface requirement, application environment, customer acceptance criteria, and report format.
Sintering, heat treatment, material grade, and secondary processing can affect hardness and mechanical response.
Hardness, tensile-related checks, material verification, heat-treatment condition, and customer specification
Which reports or records are needed?
SQE and OEM teams often need objective evidence before sample approval, trial production release, or shipment.
Dimensional reports, first article inspection, outgoing inspection records, special test reports, and shipment records
Current Inspection Resource Summary
The equipment list below should be used as a capability reference, not as a universal inspection promise for every part. Actual inspection scope still depends on drawing requirements, critical features, material route, surface condition, customer reporting format, and project risk.
Inspection Category
Current Resource Reference
Manufacturing / Quality Value
Important Boundary
Dimensional measurement
CMM 7; OMM 21; 3D scanner 1; electronic altimeter 7
Supports critical dimensions, hole position, profile review, sintered dimension change, and sizing result confirmation.
Measurement method should be selected by drawing geometry and datum strategy.
Supports metallographic preparation, structure observation, and material or element screening.
XRF is useful for screening but does not replace all formal chemical analysis or third-party certification.
Surface and reliability-related testing
Roughness tester 2; salt spray tester 3; constant temperature and humidity test chamber 2; thermal shock test chamber 2; abrasion-related testing resources
Supports surface, corrosion, coating, cosmetic, and environmental requirement review for selected projects.
These tests are project-dependent and should be defined before quotation or sample approval.
How Inspection Methods Support Project Decisions
For supplier evaluation, the important question is not only which equipment exists, but which project risk the equipment helps control. The table below connects common MIM project risks with practical inspection support and the decision value for engineering teams.
Project Risk
Recommended Inspection Support
Decision Value
Tight hole position, datum tolerance, or assembly alignment
CMM, OMM, height measurement, or project-specific gauge review
Confirms whether sintered and post-sized dimensions match functional assembly requirements.
Small holes, thin profiles, slots, or optical contour features
OMM and visual dimensional review
Helps verify small features that may be difficult to measure consistently by contact methods alone.
Complex curved surfaces or early shape deviation
3D scanning combined with drawing-based measurement
Supports sample comparison and tooling or sintering feedback without replacing final critical dimension inspection.
Material grade or alloy-family confirmation
XRF screening, material certificate review, and project-defined material verification
Reduces material mismatch risk and identifies whether further material confirmation is needed.
Heat-treated, wear-related, or hardness-sensitive features
Rockwell or Vickers hardness testing according to project requirement
Checks heat treatment response, material condition, or wear-related acceptance criteria.
Cosmetic surface, coating durability, or corrosion exposure
Roughness testing, visual review, abrasion-related checks, salt spray or environmental tests when specified
Supports appearance, surface treatment, and reliability-related decisions before production release.
What Should Be Inspected Before Sample Approval or Production Release?
Before a MIM part is approved for production release, the inspection scope should be defined according to part function. In practice, not every dimension on a drawing carries the same risk. A cosmetic surface, a mounting hole, a sliding interface, a latch feature, and a datum surface may need different inspection methods and acceptance rules.
Dimensions and Critical Tolerances
Dimensional inspection usually focuses on features that affect assembly, function, or downstream processing. For MIM parts, critical dimensions may include length, diameter, hole position, slot width, step height, flatness, profile, wall-related features, thread-related areas, and mating surfaces.
Surface Condition and Visual Defects
Surface inspection should consider both appearance and process-related risk. A surface issue may be cosmetic, or it may indicate green part handling damage, debinding stress, sintering distortion, contamination, or finishing-related damage.
Material, Hardness and Mechanical Requirements
Material-related inspection depends on the selected material grade and the application requirement. Hardness, tensile-related testing, metallographic review, and material verification should be defined according to customer specification and agreed inspection plans.
Surface, Corrosion and Reliability-Related Checks
Cosmetic parts, wearable components, consumer electronics parts, and surface-treated parts may require roughness testing, abrasion checks, salt spray testing, temperature and humidity testing, or thermal shock testing.
엔지니어링 참고사항: A quality engineer should not only ask whether the part can be measured, but whether the measurement plan matches the real functional risk. Critical dimensions, datum references, surface requirements, and inspection methods should be aligned before sample approval.
Typical dimensional review items include datum structure and measurement reference, critical-to-function dimensions, assembly-related holes, slots, ribs, bosses and mating faces, flatness and positional relationships, features affected by sintering support or post-sintering sizing, and dimensions that may require secondary machining or gauge inspection. For tolerance strategy, see MIM tolerances and dimensional strategy.
Dimensional Inspection Equipment for Critical MIM Features
Dimensional inspection is a core part of MIM validation because MIM parts are formed oversized and then shrink during sintering. The inspection plan must confirm whether the final sintered or post-processed part meets functional requirements. XTMIM’s dimensional inspection resources include CMM, OMM, 3D scanning, and electronic height measurement equipment.
CMM
Best suited for datum-based relationships, hole position, profile, mating faces, and functional 3D dimensions where the drawing defines clear measurement references.
OMM
Useful for small holes, slots, thin edges, 2D profiles, optical contours, and small precision features that may be sensitive to contact measurement.
3D Scanning
Helpful for complex geometry comparison, early sample deviation review, and tooling or sintering feedback, but it does not replace all final drawing-based inspection.
CMM and optical measurement for critical MIM dimensions.
CMM and optical measurement help verify datum-based dimensions, small holes, slots, and profiles in precision MIM parts. CMM is suitable for datum-based relationships, while OMM is useful for small holes, slots, thin profiles, and contour features.
CMM Inspection for Datum-Based Dimensions
CMM inspection is useful when the part requires controlled relationships between datums, holes, mounting faces, profiles, or position-related dimensions. For MIM parts, this is especially important when the part will be assembled into a device, mechanism, housing, latch, hinge, connector, or precision module.
CMM inspection can support review of datum-based features, hole position and spacing, critical mating faces, profile and shape-related dimensions, flatness or height relationships, and production approval dimensions. In practice, CMM inspection should be used where the drawing defines meaningful datums and tolerance relationships. If the drawing lacks clear datum references, the engineering team may need to review how the part should be measured before sample approval.
Optical Measurement for Small Features and Profiles
Optical measuring machines are useful for small MIM features, thin profiles, slots, holes, edges, and contour-related dimensions. Many MIM parts are small and geometrically complex, so optical measurement can be more practical than contact measurement for certain features.
OMM inspection may support small hole and slot review, thin edge or profile measurement, contour comparison, micro feature inspection, and visual dimensional review for small precision parts. For small MIM components, optical measurement can help identify deviations that may affect assembly even when the part looks acceptable by visual inspection alone.
3D Scanning for Complex Geometry Review
3D scanning may be useful for complex geometry review, early sample comparison, shape deviation analysis, and tooling or sintering feedback. It can help visualize how a complex part deviates from the intended shape, especially when the part includes curved surfaces, asymmetric features, or multiple geometry transitions.
However, 3D scanning should not be presented as a replacement for all precision measurement. It is best used as part of a broader inspection strategy together with drawing-based measurement, CMM inspection, optical measurement, gauge checks, and engineering review.
Hardness, Mechanical and Material-Related Testing
Hardness, tensile-related testing, and material-related verification help confirm whether a MIM part meets functional requirements beyond geometry. These methods should be applied according to project requirements and agreed test methods rather than treated as universal default testing for every part.
Hardness and mechanical testing support for MIM components.
Hardness testing may be used for heat-treated, wear-related, or material-sensitive MIM components when required by the project. Tensile testing should be confirmed according to specimen preparation, test method, customer specification, and reporting requirements.
Hardness Testing for Heat-Treated or Wear-Related Parts
Hardness testing is often relevant when the part is heat-treated, wear-related, load-bearing, or specified with a hardness requirement. For example, low alloy steel MIM parts may require heat treatment depending on the application, while stainless steel or soft magnetic parts may require different verification priorities.
Hardness review can support heat treatment confirmation, wear-related application review, batch acceptance for material-sensitive parts, comparison between sample and production lots, and failure analysis when hardness deviation is suspected. The hardness requirement should be defined before production because material selection, sintering condition, heat treatment, and surface finishing can all affect the final result.
Tensile and Mechanical Testing When Required by the Project
Tensile or mechanical testing may be required when the customer specification, material standard, or application risk calls for mechanical property verification. The test method, sample type, acceptance criteria, and reporting format should be confirmed before the project moves into production planning.
A common mistake is to assume that the finished MIM part itself can always be used directly as a tensile specimen. In reality, tensile testing for sintered metal materials depends on specimen geometry, preparation method, material condition, and applicable standards. ISO 2740:2023 is relevant when defining tensile test piece requirements for sintered metal materials, including MIM-related sintering applications.
Metallographic and XRF Analysis Support
Material-related inspection may require more than checking a supplier’s material name. For selected projects, metallographic preparation, microscopy, and XRF analysis can support material verification, process review, and defect analysis.
Metallographic and XRF analysis support for MIM parts.
Metallographic preparation, microscopy, and XRF analysis can support material-related review and defect investigation when required by the project. XRF can support alloy element screening, but it should not be described as a complete replacement for all formal chemical composition certification.
Metallographic Preparation and Microscopy
Metallographic support can help evaluate selected material or process-related questions. In MIM projects, it may be used to support review of sintering-related structure, defect investigation, material condition, or special customer requirements.
Metallographic review may be considered when a part has unusual cracking or fracture behavior, sintering-related material condition needs investigation, a customer requires structure-related evidence, a production issue suggests material or process variation, or engineering review needs more evidence than dimensional inspection alone. This type of testing should be tied to a real project question. It should not be added only to make the inspection process look more complex.
XRF Material Verification Support
XRF analysis can support material-related verification and alloy element screening. It may help confirm whether the material condition is aligned with the expected material family or whether further material review is needed.
However, XRF analysis should not be described as a complete replacement for all chemical composition certification or third-party laboratory testing. Final material acceptance should follow the customer specification, applicable material standard, and confirmed inspection plan.
Surface, Abrasion and Reliability-Related Testing
Surface and reliability-related testing becomes important when the MIM part has cosmetic requirements, surface treatment, corrosion exposure, environmental exposure, or contact-wear requirements. These tests are project-dependent and should be confirmed before quotation or sample approval when surface or environmental performance is important.
Surface and reliability testing for surface-sensitive MIM parts.
Surface and reliability tests may be used for corrosion-sensitive, coated, cosmetic, or customer-specified MIM components. They are not default requirements for every MIM part and should be defined according to application environment and customer acceptance criteria.
Surface Roughness and Cosmetic Surface Review
Surface roughness testing may be required when the part has a mating surface, sliding surface, sealing-related surface, or cosmetic appearance requirement. For MIM parts, the final surface condition can be influenced by feedstock quality, mold surface, injection condition, sintering, polishing, tumbling, sandblasting, passivation, coating, or other finishing processes.
Surface review should define which surface matters, whether the requirement is cosmetic or functional, whether roughness should be measured, whether finishing may affect dimensions, and whether appearance samples should be approved before production.
Salt Spray and Environmental Testing Support
Salt spray testing, temperature and humidity testing, and thermal shock testing may be relevant for parts exposed to corrosion, humidity, temperature cycling, or customer-defined environmental conditions. These tests are not default requirements for every MIM project. They should be specified when the application environment or customer acceptance criteria require them.
This is especially important for plated, passivated, polished, or surface-treated MIM components. If the surface treatment is supplied by an external process or customer-approved route, the inspection plan should also clarify responsibility, acceptance method, and reporting requirements.
Abrasion and Coating-Related Checks for Surface-Sensitive Parts
Abrasion and coating-related checks are useful for parts that are touched, rubbed, worn, cleaned, assembled repeatedly, or exposed as visible components. These tests may apply to wearable devices, consumer electronics, watch-related parts, buttons, covers, decorative components, and similar surface-sensitive applications.
The important engineering question is not whether abrasion testing exists, but whether the test method matches the actual use condition. A decorative part, a contact surface, and a functional sliding part may need different acceptance logic.
Inspection Flow from Drawing Review to Shipment Release
Inspection should begin before production, not after parts are already finished. For MIM projects, the inspection flow should connect engineering review, tooling feedback, sample inspection, trial production verification, production inspection, and shipment release.
MIM inspection flow from drawing review to shipment release.
MIM inspection should start with drawing and critical dimension review, then continue through sample approval, trial production, final inspection, and shipment release. This prevents the misunderstanding that inspection begins only after parts are finished.
단계
검사 중점
Engineering Purpose
Drawing and specification review
Critical dimensions, datums, material, surface, and testing requirements
Define what must be inspected before tooling or sample approval
Sample / first article inspection
Initial dimensions, surface condition, and functional features
Identify tooling, shrinkage, or sintering correction needs
Trial production verification
Repeatability, variation, fixture suitability, and gauge suitability
Confirm whether the process can support stable production
In-process inspection
Key process checks, semi-finished part review, and gauge checks
Detect variation before final shipment
최종 검사
Dimensions, appearance, function-related features, and reports
Confirm shipment readiness
Shipment records
Inspection report, batch record, packaging records, and shipping records
Support traceability and customer review
Drawing and Critical Dimension Review
The drawing review stage should define which dimensions are critical and how they should be measured. This includes datum references, tolerance requirements, functional surfaces, assembly features, surface requirements, material grade, and testing requirements. If the drawing is incomplete, the inspection plan may be unclear. For example, a part may have a tight hole position requirement but no clear datum structure. In that case, the supplier and customer should align on the measurement method before first article inspection.
Sample inspection is used to identify whether the part meets drawing requirements and whether the process needs adjustment before trial or production. For MIM parts, sample inspection may reveal tooling compensation issues, sintering distortion, gate-related marks, surface defects, or post-sintering sizing needs.
The purpose of first article inspection is not only to approve or reject parts. It should also create feedback for mold correction, shrinkage compensation, sintering support, debinding or sintering condition review, post-sintering sizing or machining strategy, and inspection method confirmation. For more context, see project development and production handoff.
Production and Final Inspection
During production, inspection should confirm that the process remains stable enough for the agreed acceptance criteria. Depending on the part and project requirement, production inspection may include in-process checks, gauge inspection, optical inspection, CMM measurement, surface review, hardness checks, and final outgoing inspection.
This section connects with XTMIM’s quality control process, where SOPs, process checks, in-process inspection, quality records, and production control logic are explained in more detail.
What Inspection Can Reveal in MIM Production
Inspection results should not be treated only as pass/fail data. For MIM parts, inspection findings often reveal where the real process risk is located. A dimensional deviation may be related to tooling compensation, sintering support, geometry imbalance, or post-sintering sizing. A surface crack may be related to green part handling, debinding stress, or local geometry transitions. A hardness issue may point to material, sintering, or heat treatment conditions.
MIM inspection feedback from finding to cause and engineering response.
High-value inspection does more than judge pass or fail. It helps the engineering team identify whether a problem may come from shrinkage, tooling compensation, debinding stress, material route, sintering condition, heat treatment, or acceptance criteria.
Review mold compensation, critical dimension strategy, and sintering support
Flatness or warpage issue
Geometry imbalance, sintering stress, poor support condition
Review setter design, part orientation, and post-sintering sizing
Hole or slot deviation
Core pin design, shrinkage direction, sintering movement
Review core design, machining allowance, and gauge requirement
Surface crack
Green part handling, debinding stress, sharp transition
Review wall transition, debinding route, and handling method
Hardness deviation
Material condition, sintering, heat treatment variation
Review material route, heat treatment condition, and acceptance criteria
Rough surface
Molding, sintering, finishing, or surface treatment variation
Review surface requirement and finishing process
엔지니어링 교육용 복합 필드 시나리오
발생한 문제: A small MIM component passed general visual inspection, but a functional hole position showed inconsistent results during sample review.
발생 원인: The drawing defined a tight positional requirement, but the datum interpretation and inspection method were not aligned early enough. The feature was also sensitive to sintering movement and local geometry balance.
실제 시스템적 원인: The issue was not only a measurement problem. It involved drawing interpretation, tooling compensation, sintering support, and first article feedback.
수정 방법: The inspection method was aligned with the functional datum, critical dimensions were reviewed again, and tooling or process correction was evaluated based on repeated sample data.
재발 방지 방법: Before tooling or sample approval, critical dimensions should be identified, datum strategy should be agreed, and the inspection method should be confirmed together with the engineering review.
Inspection Records, Reports and Traceability
Inspection evidence is important for supplier evaluation because it shows how a factory controls acceptance, not only how it manufactures parts. For MIM projects, documentation may include dimensional inspection reports, first article inspection records, in-process inspection records, outgoing inspection records, material-related records, surface or reliability test reports, and shipment records.
Inspection reports and traceability records for MIM production.
Inspection records, report folders, sample trays, and measuring tools help document sample approval, production inspection, and shipment release. Customer names, part numbers, drawing numbers, measured values, and project data should be protected or desensitized before being shown publicly.
Inspection Reports for Samples and Production Lots
Depending on customer requirements, inspection reports may include first article inspection reports, dimensional inspection reports, CMM or OMM measurement data, hardness or material-related test reports, surface or reliability test reports, outgoing inspection reports, and customer-specific report formats when agreed before production.
A report should not only list measurements. It should connect the measurement method to the drawing requirement, critical dimension, tolerance, and acceptance criteria.
Process Records and Shipment Records
Production records help connect final inspection to the actual process. These may include SOPs, parameter check records, in-process inspection records, gauge inspection records, packaging records, warehousing records, and shipment records.
For quality engineers, traceability helps answer which lot was inspected, which dimensions were checked, which acceptance criteria were used, whether the inspection was linked to the drawing, whether special tests were required, and whether the shipment was released after inspection.
Documentation boundary: Customer-specific documentation requirements should be discussed during project review. If PPAP, APQP, industry-specific forms, or special approval documents are required, they should be confirmed before quotation or project launch rather than assumed as standard for every MIM project.
When Special Inspection Requirements Should Be Defined Early
Special inspection requirements should be defined before tooling, sampling, or production planning. If a customer only provides a 3D model without critical dimensions, material grade, or testing requirements, the supplier may not know which features require special control.
Requirement to Define
중요성
중요 치수
Helps define what must be measured first and what requires tighter process feedback.
Datum references
Prevents inconsistent measurement interpretation between customer, supplier, and inspection team.
공차 수준
Affects process route, tooling review, inspection method, sample correction effort, and cost.
기능 표면
Identifies surfaces that affect assembly, sliding, sealing, appearance, or downstream finishing.
재질 등급
Determines material-related inspection, hardness review, heat treatment, and test requirements.
경도 요구 사항
Influences heat treatment planning and hardness verification method.
표면 마감 요구사항
Affects polishing, blasting, coating, roughness checks, appearance samples, and dimensional risk after finishing.
Corrosion or environmental requirement
Determines whether salt spray, humidity, thermal shock, or other reliability-related testing is needed.
Cosmetic acceptance criteria
Prevents late disputes on visible surface quality, color difference, gate mark visibility, or finishing condition.
Inspection requirement or acceptance standard
Clarifies whether the project requires CMM report, hardness report, material verification, reliability test, customer format, or other agreed evidence.
Report format
Helps align documentation before shipment and avoids late changes to inspection evidence requirements.
예상 연간 생산량
Supports inspection frequency, gauge planning, production control strategy, and project cost review.
적용 환경
Helps decide whether special testing is necessary instead of adding unnecessary tests to every project.
Before quotation, customers should provide 2D drawings with tolerances, 3D CAD files when available, material grade or performance requirement, critical dimensions and functional surfaces, surface finish and appearance requirements, inspection requirements or acceptance criteria, estimated annual volume, application background, and special testing or report requirements. Before production, both sides should confirm the final drawing revision, approved material route, critical dimension list, inspection method, acceptance criteria, sample approval process, surface standard, report format, packaging requirements, traceability requirements, and shipment release criteria.
For MIM parts with critical dimensions, functional surfaces, surface treatment requirements, hardness requirements, inspection requirements, acceptance criteria, or special testing needs, send your drawing package to XTMIM for inspection planning and production review. Please include 2D drawings, 3D CAD files if available, material grade, critical dimensions, tolerance requirements, surface finish, cosmetic criteria, inspection standards or acceptance criteria, estimated annual volume, and application environment.
XTMIM’s engineering and quality team can review whether the part requires CMM inspection, optical measurement, hardness testing, material verification, surface testing, reliability-related checks, customer-specific inspection reports, or production release controls before tooling, sampling, or production release.
Inspection and testing should be understood together with engineering review, manufacturing, project development, and quality control. These pages help users evaluate XTMIM’s broader project support capability.
Relevant standards and technical references can support material, testing, and inspection discussions, but they should not replace project-specific drawing review, customer specifications, or supplier-specific process evaluation.
ASTM B883 — 금속 사출 성형 재료의 표준 규격: relevant for ferrous MIM materials made by mixing metal powders with binders, injection molding, debinding, sintering, and optional heat treatment.
Project-specific rule: Final inspection scope, critical dimensions, reporting format, applicable standards, and acceptance criteria must be confirmed according to the customer drawing, material requirement, application environment, and agreed inspection plan.
FAQ
XTMIM은 MIM 부품에 대해 어떤 검사 방법을 사용합니까?
XTMIM은 도면 기반 치수 측정, 광학 측정, CMM 검사, 3D 스캐닝 지원, 육안 검사, 경도 시험, 필요 시 인장 관련 시험, 금속조직 검토, XRF 분석, 표면 거칠기 시험, 선별된 신뢰성 관련 시험을 통해 MIM 부품 검사를 지원합니다. 실제 검사 계획은 도면, 중요 치수, 재료 등급, 표면 요구 사항 및 고객 승인 기준에 따라 결정됩니다.
XTMIM에서 고객 도면을 기준으로 중요 치수를 검사할 수 있나요?
네. 고객의 2D 도면과 검사 요구사항을 통해 중요 치수를 검토할 수 있습니다. MIM 부품의 경우 중요 치수는 데이텀, 기능면, 조립 형상, 공차 수준 및 적용 위험과 명확하게 연결되어야 합니다. 도면에 측정 기준이 명확히 정의되지 않은 경우, 샘플 승인 전에 검사 방법을 조정해야 합니다.
소형 MIM 부품에 CMM 및 OMM 검사가 가능한가요?
네. XTMIM의 치수 검사 장비로는 CMM과 OMM 장비가 있습니다. CMM 검사는 데이텀 기반 치수, 위치, 프로파일 및 기능적 관계에 적합합니다. OMM 검사는 작은 구멍, 슬롯, 모서리, 윤곽 및 소형 정밀 형상에 유용합니다. 부품 형상과 도면 요구사항에 따라 최적의 검사 방법을 선택해야 합니다.
경도, 인장 또는 금속조직 검사를 의뢰할 수 있나요?
재료, 열처리, 고객 사양 또는 적용 위험에 따라 경도 시험, 인장 관련 시험 및 금속 조직 검토가 사용될 수 있습니다. 이러한 시험은 생산 전에 정의되어야 합니다. 시편 준비, 시험 방법, 합격 기준 및 보고 형식은 프로젝트에 따라 다를 수 있기 때문입니다.
모든 MIM 프로젝트에 완전한 기계적 또는 신뢰성 테스트가 필요한가요?
아니요. 모든 MIM 프로젝트에 전체 기계적 시험, 염수 분무 시험, 환경 시험, 마모 시험 또는 금속조직 검토가 필요한 것은 아닙니다. 시험 범위는 도면, 재료 등급, 기능적 위험, 표면 요구사항, 적용 환경, 고객 표준 및 합의된 합격 기준에 따라 정의되어야 합니다.
모든 MIM 부품에 염수 분무 및 환경 시험이 필요한가요?
아니요. 염수 분무, 항온항습 시험, 열충격 시험, 마모 시험 및 코팅 관련 검사는 프로젝트에 따라 다릅니다. 이러한 검사는 부식에 민감한 부품, 표면 처리된 부품, 외관 부품, 웨어러블 기기, 소비자 가전 부품 또는 고객이 정의한 신뢰성 요구사항이 있는 경우에 더 적합합니다.
XTMIM에서 선적 전 검사 보고서를 제공할 수 있나요?
검사 보고서는 합의된 검사 계획 및 고객 요구사항에 따라 작성될 수 있습니다. 보고서에는 치수 검사, 초품 검사, 출하 검사, 경도 또는 재료 관련 검사, 표면 시험 또는 신뢰성 관련 시험 결과가 필요한 경우 포함될 수 있습니다. 보고서 형식은 생산 전에 확인되어야 합니다.
고객이 검사 계획 수립을 위해 제공해야 하는 정보는 무엇인가요?
고객은 2D 도면, 가능한 경우 3D CAD 파일, 재료 등급, 중요 치수, 데이텀 요구사항, 공차 수준, 표면 마감 요구사항, 외관 기준, 특수 시험 규격, 예상 연간 생산량 및 적용 배경을 제공해야 합니다. 이는 엔지니어링 및 품질 팀이 금형 제작이나 생산 전에 실질적인 검사 계획을 수립하는 데 도움이 됩니다.
검사 피드백이 MIM 금형 또는 소결 공정 제어 개선에 어떻게 도움이 됩니까?
검사 피드백을 통해 치수, 표면, 경도 또는 평탄도 문제가 금형 보정, 수축 방향, 소결 지지대, 탈지 응력, 열처리 또는 마무리 조건과 관련이 있는지 확인할 수 있습니다. 이를 통해 엔지니어링 팀은 검사를 단순한 합격/불합격 단계로 처리하지 않고 공정을 조정할 수 있습니다.
저자 및 엔지니어링 검토
Author / Engineering Review: XTMIM 엔지니어링 팀
This page was prepared and reviewed from the perspective of MIM manufacturing, quality inspection, material verification, tooling feedback, sintering risk, dimensional control, and production feasibility. The review focus includes process suitability, material selection, DFM, tooling and shrinkage compensation risk, sintering-related deformation, tolerance and inspection requirements, surface or reliability testing needs, and production handoff requirements.
Inspection recommendations should be confirmed according to the customer’s drawing, material grade, application environment, critical dimensions, inspection requirements, and agreed acceptance criteria.