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  • Article - 18 Jun 2013
    Tools steels are mainly used for manufacturing tools used in machining plastics, metals and woods. However, tool steels must be fabricated into the desired shape before they are able to be used.
  • Article - 18 Jun 2013
    Carbon steels is a category of steel, which contains 0.12 to 2% carbon. This steel category gains hardness and strength with heat treatment when the percentage of carbon content increases but the...
  • Article - 18 Jun 2013
    The AISI grades of tool steels are the most common scale used to identify various grades of tool steel. The higher carbon grade tool steels are typically used for applications such as stamping dies,...
  • Article - 18 Jun 2013
    Tool steels are primarily used to manufacture tools that can be used for machining metals, woods, and plastics. They are generally ingot-cast wrought products, and have the potential to be stable at...
  • Article - 17 Jun 2013
    The steel gains hardness and strength with heat treatment when the carbon percentage content increases; however its ductility is reduced.
  • Article - 18 Jun 2013
    Stainless steels are called as high-alloy steels. Due to the presence of large amounts of chromium in the range of 4 to 30%, they have high corrosion resistance than other steels.
  • Article - 21 Jun 2013
    Stainless steel 15 – 5 PH, also known as XM-12 or UNS S15500, is a modification of 17-4 PH developed in the 1960s. It has a more refined microstructure obtained through the remelting process.
  • Article - 19 Jun 2013
    Tool steels are a kind of carbon and alloy steels that are well-suited for manufacturing tools. They are usually used in a heat-treated state.
  • Article - 13 Aug 2013
    Tungsten, a good carbide former, is a steel gray metal that increases temperature and red hardness, prevents gain growth and improves toughness of steels. Tungsten is used in high speed steels and hot...
  • 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.

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