Thursday, November 3, 2011

Alloy Steel

Many alloy steel composition and the symbol are as follows:
  • EN8: contain 0.4 % medium carbon steel. General purpose this steel for application requiring added strength and superior tensile properties to mild steel specifications.
  • EN9: 0.5% carbon steel giving higher tensile than EN8. Can be induction or flame hardened
  • EN14: A carbon manganese steel
  • EN16: A low alloy high tensile steel
  • EN19: 1% chromium molybdenum high tensile steel. Suitable for highly stressed applications where greater strength is required.
  • EN24: Nickel Chromium molybdenum high tensile steel. Has good wear and shock resistance and is suitable for tensile ranges up to 1550 N/mm2.
  • EN26: A 2.5% nickel chromium molybdenum high tensile steel.
  • EN308: 41/4% nickel steel. Achieves a good through hardness with air or oil hardening. It is capable of taking a good polish and is widely used as a plastic mould steel.
  • EN31: High carbon alloy steel which achieves a high degree of hardness with compressive strength and abrasion resistance.
  • EN32: Special mild case hardening steel which can provide a hard wearing surface with a tough core.
  • EN36: Nickel chromium case hardening steel. Give a very hard surface with a strong core and retaining a high degree of toughness.
  • EN40B: 3% chromium molybdenum nitriding steel. It will achieve a good core strength with a hard nitrided surface. The nitriding process leaves the component scale free.
  • EN41: Similar nitriding specification to EN40B but with improved nitriding characteristic.

How to Joint Iron without Welding

Joining iron without being welded is nothing new but usually the result is not as strong as if it were connected by welding. We can connect...