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Results 1791 - 1800 of 1850 for Oils
  • Article - 27 Sep 2012
    Aluminum alloys feature strong corrosion resistance. These alloys are considered as good low-temperature alloys as their strength increases when exposed to subzero temperatures and they lose some of...
  • Article - 21 Sep 2012
    Carbon is the main alloying element present in the carbon steels. They also contain 0.4% of silicon and 1.2% of manganese. Elements such as nickel, copper, aluminium, and molybdenum are present in...
  • Article - 27 Sep 2012
    Possessing good properties, workability, and a wide field of commercial applications, copper-nickel (Cu-Ni) alloys are commercially important for a number of industries.
  • Article - 9 Aug 2013
    Low alloy special purpose steels or group L steels contain small quantities of chromium, nickel, vanadium, and molybdenum. L2 and L6 form the group L steels.
  • Article - 17 Dec 2012
    Low-carbon mold steels or group P steels are of different types that include P2, P3, P4, P5, P6, P20, and P21 steels. Chromium and nickel are the main alloying elements found in group P steels.
  • Article - 13 Sep 2012
    Molybdenum high speed steels are designated as Group M steels according to the AISI classification system. Over 95% of high-speed steels manufactured in the US are group M steels.
  • Article - 25 Oct 2012
    High-speed tool steels are broadly classified into molybdenum high-speed steels and tungsten high-speed steels. The molybdenum high-speed steels are also referred to as Group M steels.
  • Article - 25 Oct 2012
    High-speed tool steels are of two types, namely molybdenum high-speed steels and tungsten high-speed steels. The molybdenum high-speed steels are also referred to as Group M steels.
  • Article - 25 Oct 2012
    Molybdenum high-speed steels and tungsten high-speed steels are two types of high-speed tool steels. Molybdenum high-speed steels, also known as group M steels, have less initial cost.
  • Article - 25 Oct 2012
    High-speed tool steels are divided into molybdenum high-speed steels and tungsten high-speed steels. Molybdenum high-speed steels are known as Group M steels.

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