Material classification
Does anyone know what kind this material based on chemical composition,
and refer to what standard or ASTM number? C 0.19 Si 0.54 Mn 1.03 P 0.011 S 0.003 Cr 1.05 Mo 0.248 Ni 0.884 Cu 0.047 V 0.004 Thanks for your assistance, -- Salam, |
Material classification
"chandak" wrote in message roups.com... Does anyone know what kind this material based on chemical composition, and refer to what standard or ASTM number? C 0.19 Si 0.54 Mn 1.03 P 0.011 S 0.003 Cr 1.05 Mo 0.248 Ni 0.884 Cu 0.047 V 0.004 Thanks for your assistance, -- Salam, What's the rest of it? Iron? You have only a few percent of total composition listed there. -- Ed Huntress |
Material classification
On Tue, 5 Apr 2011 02:32:35 -0400, "Ed Huntress"
wrote: "chandak" wrote in message groups.com... Does anyone know what kind this material based on chemical composition, and refer to what standard or ASTM number? C 0.19 Si 0.54 Mn 1.03 P 0.011 S 0.003 Cr 1.05 Mo 0.248 Ni 0.884 Cu 0.047 V 0.004 Thanks for your assistance, -- Salam, What's the rest of it? Iron? You have only a few percent of total composition listed there. Assuming the remainder is iron, it looks like a chrome-moly steel, though the carbon is low for the common grades (4140, 4340, etc.). Perhaps a carburizing chrome-moly steel similar to 8620? http://www.matweb.com/search/DataShe...e5c9834 85c1f This might help: http://www.matweb.com/search/CompositionSearch.aspx -- Ned Simmons |
Material classification
Why do you ask? Are you looking for a material like this or has someone
offered you some material like this? If the latter, where did it come from? The Cr, Mo and Ni are pretty low to do much good. I'd guess this is melted down automobiles without the cast iron of the engine, etc.. Pete Stanaitis ------------------ "chandak" wrote in message roups.com... Does anyone know what kind this material based on chemical composition, and refer to what standard or ASTM number? C 0.19 Si 0.54 Mn 1.03 P 0.011 S 0.003 Cr 1.05 Mo 0.248 Ni 0.884 Cu 0.047 V 0.004 Thanks for your assistance, -- Salam, |
Material classification
On Apr 5, 12:30*pm, "Pete S" wrote:
Why do you ask? *Are you looking for a material like this or has someone offered you some material like this? If the latter, where did it come from? The Cr, Mo and Ni are pretty low to do much good. *I'd guess this is melted down automobiles without the cast iron of the engine, etc.. Pete Stanaitis ------------------ "chandak" wrote in message roups.com... Does anyone know what kind this material based on chemical composition, and refer to what standard or ASTM number? C 0.19 Si 0.54 Mn 1.03 P 0.011 S 0.003 Cr 1.05 Mo 0.248 Ni 0.884 Cu 0.047 V 0.004 Thanks for your assistance, -- Salam, The over 1% phosphorus content also not typical; certainly not for any weldable grade steel. Wolfgang |
Material classification
wolfgang wrote:
On Apr 5, 12:30 pm, "Pete S" wrote: Why do you ask? Are you looking for a material like this or has someone offered you some material like this? If the latter, where did it come from? The Cr, Mo and Ni are pretty low to do much good. I'd guess this is melted down automobiles without the cast iron of the engine, etc.. Pete Stanaitis ------------------ "chandak" wrote in message roups.com... Does anyone know what kind this material based on chemical composition, and refer to what standard or ASTM number? C 0.19 Si 0.54 Mn 1.03 P 0.011 S 0.003 Cr 1.05 Mo 0.248 Ni 0.884 Cu 0.047 V 0.004 Thanks for your assistance, -- Salam, The over 1% phosphorus content also not typical; certainly not for any weldable grade steel. Wolfgang The OPs specification gave Phosphorus at 0.011%, you must have been relating the wrong number to the elements percentage. |
Material classification
responding to
http://www.rittercnc.com/metalworkin...on-498599-.htm chandak wrote: David Billington wrote: wolfgang wrote: On Apr 5, 12:30 pm, "Pete S" wrote: Why do you ask? Are you looking for a material like this or has someone offered you some material like this? If the latter, where did it come from? The Cr, Mo and Ni are pretty low to do much good. I'd guess this is melted down automobiles without the cast iron of the engine, etc.. Pete Stanaitis ------------------ Pete, I'm not looking for material like this, but I have to know the standard to determine the mechanical properties. "chandak" wrote in message roups.com... Does anyone know what kind this material based on chemical composition, and refer to what standard or ASTM number? C 0.19 Si 0.54 Mn 1.03 P 0.011 S 0.003 Cr 1.05 Mo 0.248 Ni 0.884 Cu 0.047 V 0.004 Thanks for your assistance, -- Salam, The over 1% phosphorus content also not typical; certainly not for any weldable grade steel. Wolfgang The OPs specification gave Phosphorus at 0.011%, you must have been relating the wrong number to the elements percentage. No, the percentage of Phosphorous is right. -- Salam, |
Material classification
responding to
http://www.rittercnc.com/metalworkin...on-498599-.htm chandak wrote: Ed Huntress wrote: "chandak" wrote in message roups.com... Does anyone know what kind this material based on chemical composition, and refer to what standard or ASTM number? C 0.19 Si 0.54 Mn 1.03 P 0.011 S 0.003 Cr 1.05 Mo 0.248 Ni 0.884 Cu 0.047 V 0.004 Thanks for your assistance, -- Salam, What's the rest of it? Iron? You have only a few percent of total composition listed there. -- Salam, Yes, the left composition is Fe, not mentioned because it's main elemen |
Material classification
responding to
http://www.rittercnc.com/metalworkin...on-498599-.htm chandak wrote: Ned Simmons wrote: On Tue, 5 Apr 2011 02:32:35 -0400, "Ed Huntress" wrote: "chandak" wrote in message sgroups.com... Does anyone know what kind this material based on chemical composition, and refer to what standard or ASTM number? C 0.19 Si 0.54 Mn 1.03 P 0.011 S 0.003 Cr 1.05 Mo 0.248 Ni 0.884 Cu 0.047 V 0.004 Thanks for your assistance, -- Salam, What's the rest of it? Iron? You have only a few percent of total composition listed there. Assuming the remainder is iron, it looks like a chrome-moly steel, though the carbon is low for the common grades (4140, 4340, etc.). Perhaps a carburizing chrome-moly steel similar to 8620? http://www.matweb.com/search/DataShe...e5c9834 85c1f This might help: http://www.matweb.com/search/CompositionSearch.aspx Simmons, thanks a lot for your advice, highly appreciated it.you are solving my problem -- Salam, |
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