Tel : 0086-0371-86172891
High Carbon Steel is often called tool steel, with a carbon content from 0.60% to 1.70%, which can be quenched and tempered. Hammers, crowbars, etc. are made of steel with a carbon content of 0.75%; cutting tools such as drills, taps, and reamers are made of steel with a carbon content of 0.90% to 1.00%.
After proper heat treatment or cold drawing hardening, high carbon steel has high strength and hardness, high elastic limit and fatigue limit, and the cutting performance is acceptable, but the welding performance and cold plastic deformation ability are poor. Due to the high carbon content, cracks are prone to occur during water quenching, so double-liquid quenching is often used, and oil quenching is mostly used for small cross-section parts. This type of steel is generally used in the state of tempering or normalizing at medium temperature or surface quenching after quenching. Mainly used to manufacture springs and wear-resistant parts. Carbon tool steel is a high-carbon steel that basically does not add alloying elements. It is also a steel grade with low cost, good cold and hot workability, and a wide range of use among tool steels. Its carbon content is between 0.65 and 1.35%, and it is a steel specially used for making tools. The density of high carbon steel is 7.81g/cm³. Can be used for the production of fishing gear.
Shaft parts of the function, structural characteristics and technical requirements
Shaft parts are one of the typical parts that are often encountered in machines. It is mainly used to support the transmission parts.
JIS G4051
S20C |
DIN
CK20 |
CK25 |
CK30 |
CK35 |
CK40 |
CK45 |
CK50 |
CK55 |
SAE
1020 |
EN10083-2
C35 | |||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|