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  • Article - 26 Sep 2012
    Stainless steels are called as high-alloy steels. They have high corrosion resistance than other steels due to the presence of large amounts of chromium in the range of 4-30%. Based on their...
  • Article - 26 Sep 2012
    Stainless steels are high-alloy steels, which have high corrosion resistance when compared to other steels due to high chromium content of about 4-30% . Based on their crystalline structure, they are...
  • Article - 21 Sep 2012
    Steels containing carbon as the main alloying element are referred as carbon steels. They also contain 1.2% of manganese, and 0.4% of silicon. Residual elements such as chromium, molybdenum, copper,...
  • Article - 21 Sep 2012
    Carbon steels are steels containing carbon as the chief alloying element. These steels contain aluminium, chromium, copper, nickel, and molybdenum in small quantities. They also contain 0.4% of...
  • Article - 13 Sep 2012
    Carbon steels contain carbon as the primary alloying element. Small quantities of molybdenum, chromium, nickel, aluminium, and copper are also present in these steels. They contain 0.4% silicon and...
  • Article - 20 Sep 2012
    Steels containing mainly carbon as the alloying element are called carbon steels. They contain about 0.4% silicon and 1.2% manganese.
  • Article - 20 Nov 2012
    Cold-work tool steels are high carbon steels that are further classified into three subgroups such as oil-hardening steels, high-carbon, high-chromium steels, and air-hardening steels.
  • Article - 13 Nov 2012
    Chromium hot-work tool steels are designated as group H steels according to the AISI classification system. This series of steels start from H1 to H19. The most commonly used chromium hot-work 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.

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