VIDEO: The Right Steel – Ensuring a Positive Outcome for Race Cars

Ganassi measures all the metal they use in car fabrication, from the chassis to suspension component

Chip Ganassi Racing workers measure all the metal they use in car fabrication, from the chassis to suspension component.

In a previous article, we discussed how new steel grades are driving positive material identification (PMI) programs in automotive manufacturing. Off-specification metals will fail to perform as expected and can have dangerous, even catastrophic consequences. So, Positive Material Identification (PMI) — the practice of testing materials for their exact chemical composition to ensure that the incoming raw materials and the outgoing finished parts meet engineering requirements — is an integral part of the automotive world.

Employees at Chip Ganassi Racing, makers of Nascar racing cars, take this practice to heart. They never take for granted that the materials they order are the materials that they receive, even if the shipment comes with certification papers. Ganassi measures all the metal they use in car fabrication, from the chassis to suspension components, to make sure they are up to design specs.

Watch the Ganassi QA/QC process in action.

Additional Resources:

visit our improving steel processes center

 

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Written by:

Stephen Dietz

Product Manager, Thermo Fisher Scientific

Stephen Dietz spent 5 years at Thermo Fisher Scientific focusing on product management and business development of portable XRF analyzers used in metal and regulatory markets.

Read more Dietz, Stephen

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