What is PH 13-8 Mo?
What is PH 13-8 Mo?
ARMCO PH 13-8 Mo is a martensitic precipitation hardening stainless steel. It provides a combination of excellent toughness and good transverse mechanical properties, in addition to having the highly desirable corrosion resistance and high strength of a precipitation hardening stainless steel.
What is 13 8mo?
13-8 Mo is an age-hardening stainless steel with high strength and hardness along with good levels of resistance to both general corrosion and stress-corrosion cracking. PH 13-8 Mo has been used for aircraft components, nuclear reactor components, valve parts, fittings, landing gear parts, and pins.
What is 13-8 stainless steel?
ATI 13-8™ alloy (UNS S13800) is a martensitic precipitation-hardening stainless steel that has excellent strength, high hardness, superior toughness, and good corrosion resistance. Good transverse toughness properties are achieved by tight chemical composition control, low carbon content, and vacuum melting.
Is tool steel magnetic?
WHICH METALS ARE MAGNETIC? All common carbon steels (including mild steel), low alloy steels and tool steels are ferromagnetic. Some other metals such as nickel and cobalt are also ferromagnetic. Even although the duplex grades are mixtures of austenite and ferrite they are still strongly attracted to a magnet.
What is condition H1100?
Stainless Steel 17-4 H1100 is a precipitation-hardening martensitic Stainless Steel, which has corrosion resistance comparable to austenitic varieties. Our H1100 has been heat-treated to a minimum tensile strength of 140ksi, yield strength of 115ksi, an elongation in 2in of 14%, and a reduction of area of 45%.
Why is precipitation hardening used?
Precipitation hardening, also called age hardening or particle hardening, is a heat treatment technique used to increase the yield strength of malleable materials, including most structural alloys of aluminium, magnesium, nickel, titanium, and some steels and stainless steels.
Does a magnet stick to mild steel?
WHICH METALS ARE MAGNETIC? All common carbon steels (including mild steel), low alloy steels and tool steels are ferromagnetic. Even although the duplex grades are mixtures of austenite and ferrite they are still strongly attracted to a magnet.