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Encyclopedia > Tool steel
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Tool steel refers to a variety of carbon and alloy steels that are particularly well-suited to be made into tools. Their suitability comes from their distinct toughness, resistance to abrasion, their ability to hold a cutting edge and/or their resistance to deformation at elevated temperature (red-hardness). Jump to: navigation, search General Name, Symbol, Number carbon, C, 6 Chemical series nonmetals Group, Period, Block 14, 2, p Appearance black (graphite) colorless (diamond) Atomic mass 12. ... Jump to: navigation, search An alloy is a combination, either in solution or compound, of two or more elements, which has a combination of at least two metals, and where the resultant material has metallic properties. ... Jump to: navigation, search The old steel cable of a colliery winding tower Steel is a metal alloy whose major component is iron, with carbon being the primary alloying material. ... Jump to: navigation, search A modern hammer is directly descended from ancient hand tools A tool is a device that provides a mechanical or mental advantage in accomplishing a task. ...


With a carbon content between 0.7 – 1.4% Tool Steels are manufactured under carefully controlled conditions to produce the required quality. In these steels the manganese content is kept low to minimise the possibility of cracking during water quenching.


Tool Steels are made to a number of grades for different applications. Choice of grade depends on whether a keen cutting edge is necessary, as in stamping dies, or whether the tool has to withstand impact loading and service conditions encountered with such hand tools as axes, picks and quarrying implements. The higher carbon grades are used for such applications as stamping dies, metal cutting tools, etc.


A typical composition is:


Carbon (C) 1.0%, Phosphorous (P) 0.04%, Manganese (Mn) 0.3%, Sulphur (S) 0.04%, Silicon (Si) 0.25%


  Results from FactBites:
 
eFunda: General Information on Tool Steels (340 words)
Tool steels are steels that are primarily used to make tools used in manufacturing processes as well as for machining metals, woods, and plastics.
Tool steels are generally ingot-cast wrought products, and must be able to withstand high specific loads as well as be stable at elevated temperatures.
They are among the toughest of the tool steels, and are typically used for screw driver blades, shear blades, chisels, knockout pins, punches, and riveting tools.
A Woodworker's Guide to Tool Steel and Heat Treating (1907 words)
Untempered, hardened tool steel is nearly as brittle as glass.
The tool is then retempered after the cryogenic treatment, and studies show that this results in substantially increased wear resistance.
As the steel is heated, an oxide layer forms on the surface; its thickness (and thus the interference color as light is reflected) is a function of temperature.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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