When you have production schedules to meet and quality standards to maintain, you can't afford any unnecessary distractions. The CTS Fasteners & Metals Program helps you quickly and reliably monitor your lab's performance so that you can stay focused on your business. Raw material manufacturers, product manufacturers, fastener manufacturers, and independent testing labs can test with confidence and know how their performance compares to other labs around the world.
There are many reasons why the CTS program has developed into the worlds premier interlaboratory program in the field. Participation brings advantages that cannot be matched by any other provider: reports that are focused on just your laboratory, dynamic eServices, samples that are retained by your lab and not returned to the provider, dependable analysis techniques, large group statistics, and the most complete scope of testing. Join the hundreds of laboratories worldwide who participate in the program and learn exactly how well your lab stacks up.
A complete list of tests is shown on the Program Schedule panel below (see tests conducted by quarter chart).
This is one of the more unique testing areas in CTS' repertoire. Instead of the consensus values that we use in most of our other tests, we use certified reference values and uncertainties in the Dimensional tests to help you assess your measurement accuracy.
Established in 1990, this is the only fastener testing program of its kind: large-scale, on-going, and open to all participants. CTS provides the fastener industry with unbiased analyses of its measurement capabilities.
CTS offers six distinct Chemical Analysis tests. Samples (two per test) are distributed in solid disc form. Note that Nickel-Based, Copper-Based and Titanium Alloy tests occur once per year. Laboratories may perform wet or instrumental analysis. Refer to each test description for a list of commonly tested elements.
Each CTS hardness test includes TWO blocks that have been pre-tested for homogeneity and are ready to test. The participants keep the blocks upon completion of testing to use as future reference samples or in training exercises.
You need an Impact Test to determine the toughness of a material, and you need CTS to make finding a proficiency test easy. Whether testing at room temperature or low temperature, CTS offers impact tests that will meet your needs.
Getting up close and personal with your metals? Whether you like to figure out just how deep those cases really go, or how big those grains really are, CTS can help. Some of these tests are only offered once per year so please pay careful attention to the enrollment dates. We wouldn't want you to miss out!
Whether you think tensile samples should be round or flat, CTS has you covered. Be sure to read test descriptions carefully to select the test that will meet your testing needs and capabilities.
For those involved with metals and fasteners, including raw material manufacturers, product manufacturers, fastener manufacturers, and independent testing laboratories, quality of measurements has always been critical to final product quality. Previously, many laboratories only used in-house control samples to monitor instrument performance. Although this practice helped maintain consistent measurements, it did not address measurement agreement with outside laboratories. In addition, as the manufacturing process and customer markets became more and more global, the need for better measurement control became more and more essential.
Concurrently, in the late 1980s the Naval Shipyard (NSY) laboratories were working with the American Association of Laboratory Accreditation (A2LA) to determine what sort of accreditation was available and appropriate. Naturally the topic of proficiency testing as a requirement of accreditation came up. At that time there were no formal metals testing programs. Some trade associations with very narrow focuses had periodically conducted round robins, but nothing on-going or large-scale. By 1988 CTS reputation as a provider of statistically sound interlaboratory programs was well established. Even though CTS at that time did not have a history of starting up new programs from scratch as it were, that fact did not stop A2LA from recommending CTS to the NSY laboratories. So CTS, working with both groups, developed a program initially called the Metals Collaborative Reference Program for the NSY laboratories and their suppliers. However, all parties recognized from the start that any such program would ultimately require a broader base of participants and that CTS could not limit the materials to metals used in saltwater applications.
Almost immediately the tests offered and materials used in the program were applicable to a multitude of industries; the number of participating labs grew exponentially. In 1990, in response to pending federal legislation for fasteners, appropriate tests were added to the metals program to accommodate the needs of the fasteners industry. The National Institute of Science and Technology (NIST) and the National Voluntary Laboratory Accreditation Program (NVLAP), as well as A2LA, were instrumental in helping to establish the requirements for fastener testing.
Today, the CTS Fasteners & Metals Program has a very significant international presence: more than 600 laboratories worldwide currently participate. As the program continues to evolve and expand, accreditation requirements remain the strongest influence on the program. A key differentiator for the Fasteners & Metals program: half of the tests are not destructive labs can keep the samples for their own use and/or re-check if they are flagged. For those labs whose destructive test results are flagged, re-test samples are available. These benefits, combined with the fact that new tests are added periodically as the needs of the industries change, ensure the programs status as the worlds premier fasteners and metals proficiency testing program.
The Fasteners & Metals Program is an annual program and testing rounds are conducted on a quarterly basis. Subscribers participate in one or two testing cycles depending on the enrollment date and the tests' stated frequency. Enrollment deadlines and frequencies are included with individual test descriptions.
Note that data due dates occur approximately 6 weeks after a shipment date and that results must be submitted on or before a data due date in order to be included in the report.
Participants can track shipments, submit data and access reports through the CTS Customer Portal.
*While CTS will make every effort to adhere to the published program schedules, all dates provided are tentative and are subject to change.
Includes Qtrs: | Samples Ship: | Data Due | Report Issued: |
---|---|---|---|
1 | late February | early April | late April |
3 | late August | early October | late October |
Includes Qtrs: | Samples Ship: | Data Due | Report Issued: |
---|---|---|---|
2 | late May | early July | late July |
4 | mid November | late December | mid January |
Includes Qtrs: | Samples Ship: | Data Due | Report Issued: |
---|---|---|---|
3 | late August | early October | late October |
Includes Qtrs: | Samples Ship: | Data Due | Report Issued: |
---|---|---|---|
4 | mid November | late December | mid January |
Test Series | Test Name | 1st Qtr | 2nd Qtr | 3rd Qtr | 4th Qtr |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1001 | Dimensional: Outside Diameter of Plain Plug Gage | X | - | X | - |
Test Series | Test Name | 1st Qtr | 2nd Qtr | 3rd Qtr | 4th Qtr |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1003 | Charpy V-Notch (-30 degrees) | - | X | - | - |
1004 | Charpy V-Notch (Room Temperature) | - | - | - | X |
Test Series | Test Name | 1st Qtr | 2nd Qtr | 3rd Qtr | 4th Qtr |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1101 | Tensile Properties: Lab-Machined Flat Aluminum | X | - | X | - |
1111 | Tensile Properties: Pre-Machined Round Steel | X | - | X | - |
1121 | Tensile Properties: Lab-Machined Round Steel | X | - | X | - |
1131 | Tensile Properties: Lab-Machined Flat Steel | - | X | - | X |
Test Series | Test Name | 1st Qtr | 2nd Qtr | 3rd Qtr | 4th Qtr |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1201 | Fastener Wedge Tensile (10 degree) | - | X | - | X |
1202 | Fastener Axial Tensile | - | X | - | X |
1203 | Fastener Wedge Tensile (10 degree) - Metric | - | X | - | X |
1204 | Fastener Axial Tensile - Metric | - | X | - | X |
1210 | Rockwell Hardness: Externally Threaded Fasteners | - | X | - | X |
1211 | Vickers Hardness: Externally Threaded Fasteners | - | X | - | X |
1220 | Fastener Double Shear | - | X | - | X |
Test Series | Test Name | 1st Qtr | 2nd Qtr | 3rd Qtr | 4th Qtr |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1301 | Rockwell Hardness: C & B Scales | - | X | X | - |
1302 | Rockwell Hardness: B Scale | X | - | X | - |
1303 | Rockwell Hardness: C Scale | - | X | - | X |
1311 | Vickers Hardness: 10 kgf | - | X | - | X |
1321 | Microhardness: Knoop & Vickers | X | - | X | - |
1341 | Brinell Hardness | X | - | X | - |
1351 | Rockwell Superficial Hardness (30N Scale) | - | X | - | X |
Test Series | Test Name | 1st Qtr | 2nd Qtr | 3rd Qtr | 4th Qtr |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1401 | Case Depth | - | X | - | X |
1411 | Grain Size (Stainless Steel) | - | X | - | - |
1412 | Grain Size (Inconel) | - | - | - | X |
1421 | Alpha Case Depth | - | X | - | - |
1422 | Alloy Depletion: Inconel | - | X | - | - |
Test Series | Test Name | 1st Qtr | 2nd Qtr | 3rd Qtr | 4th Qtr |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1500 | Nickel-based Alloy | - | X | - | - |
1520 | Titanium-based Alloy | - | - | X | - |
1540 | Aluminum | - | X | - | X |
1600 | Carbon & Low Alloy Steel | X | - | X | - |
1640 | Corrosion Resistant Steel | - | X | - | X |
1700 | Copper-based Alloy | - | - | - | X |
3rd Quarter 2024
Fasteners & Metals Summary Report No. 147
2nd Quarter 2024
Fasteners & Metals Summary Report No. 146
1st Quarter 2024
Fasteners & Metals Summary Report No. 145
4th Quarter 2023
Fasteners & Metals Summary Report No. 144
3rd Quarter 2023
Fasteners & Metals Summary Report No. 143
2nd Quarter 2023
Fasteners & Metals Summary Report No. 142
1st Quarter 2023
Fasteners & Metals Summary Report No. 141
4th Quarter 2022
Fasteners & Metals Summary Report No. 140
3rd Quarter 2022
Fasteners & Metals Summary Report No. 139
2nd Quarter 2022
Fasteners & Metals Summary Report No. 138
1st Quarter 2022
Fasteners & Metals Summary Report No. 137
4th Quarter 2021 (GS)
Fasteners & Metals Summary Report No. 1361
4th Quarter 2021
Fasteners & Metals Summary Report No. 136
3rd Quarter 2021
Fasteners & Metals Summary Report No. 135
2nd Quarter 2021
Fasteners & Metals Summary Report No. 134
1st Quarter 2021
Fasteners & Metals Summary Report No. 133
4th Quarter 2020 (GS)
Fasteners & Metals Summary Report No. 1321
4th Quarter 2020
Fasteners & Metals Summary Report No. 132
3rd Quarter 2020
Fasteners & Metals Summary Report No. 131
2nd Quarter 2020
Fasteners & Metals Summary Report No. 130
1st Quarter 2020
Fasteners & Metals Summary Report No. 129
4th Quarter 2019
Fasteners & Metals Summary Report No. 128
3rd Quarter 2019
Fasteners & Metals Summary Report No. 127
2nd Quarter 2019
Fasteners & Metals Summary Report No. 126
1st Quarter 2019
Fasteners & Metals Summary Report No. 125
4th Quarter 2018
Fasteners & Metals Summary Report No. 124
3rd Quarter 2018
Fasteners & Metals Summary Report No. 123
2nd Quarter 2018
Fasteners & Metals Summary Report No. 122
1st Quarter 2018
Fasteners & Metals Summary Report No. 121
4th Quarter 2017
Fasteners & Metals Summary Report No. 120
3rd Quarter 2017
Fasteners & Metals Summary Report No. 119
2nd Quarter 2017
Fasteners & Metals Summary Report No. 118
1st Quarter 2017
Fasteners & Metals Summary Report No. 117
Conducted in 2016
r & n Values Preliminary Test Report
4th Quarter 2016
Fasteners & Metals Summary Report No. 116
3rd Quarter 2016
Fasteners & Metals Summary Report No. 115
2nd Quarter 2016
Fasteners & Metals Summary Report No. 114
1st Quarter 2016
Fasteners & Metals Summary Report No. 113
4th Quarter 2015
Fasteners & Metals Summary Report No. 112
3rd Quarter 2015
Fasteners & Metals Summary Report No. 111
2nd Quarter 2015
Fasteners & Metals Summary Report No. 110
1st Quarter 2015
Fasteners & Metals Summary Report No. 109
4th Quarter 2014
Fasteners & Metals Summary Report No. 108
3rd Quarter 2014
Fasteners & Metals Summary Report No. 107
2nd Quarter 2014
Fasteners & Metals Summary Report No. 106
1st Quarter 2014
Fasteners & Metals Summary Report No. 105
Participants in CTS Fasteners & Metals Program tests can access Test Instructions on the CTS Customer Portal.
A Guide to Interpreting Performance Analysis Reports, available as well on the CTS Customer Portal, assists participants in understanding and getting maximum benefit from the individual reports issued at the completion of each testing round.