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Aisi S7

Paxton & Vierling Steel established in 1885 manufactures AISI S5 tool steel. Typical uses include tools for blacksmithing, woodworking, stone working, bolts, chisels, and punches. The steel has a carbon content of 0.60% and contains various alloying elements like manganese, silicon, chromium, vanadium, and molybdenum. Forging can be done between 1850-2050°F and annealing is recommended between 1425-1475°F. Hardening involves heating to 1600-1700°F, quenching in oil, and tempering between 350-800°F to achieve a hardness of 54-60 HRC.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
198 views

Aisi S7

Paxton & Vierling Steel established in 1885 manufactures AISI S5 tool steel. Typical uses include tools for blacksmithing, woodworking, stone working, bolts, chisels, and punches. The steel has a carbon content of 0.60% and contains various alloying elements like manganese, silicon, chromium, vanadium, and molybdenum. Forging can be done between 1850-2050°F and annealing is recommended between 1425-1475°F. Hardening involves heating to 1600-1700°F, quenching in oil, and tempering between 350-800°F to achieve a hardness of 54-60 HRC.

Uploaded by

123vigen
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Paxton & Vierling Steel

ESTABLISHED 1885

Phone 712-347-5500 800-831-9252 Fax 712-347-6166

AISI S5____________
TYPICAL ANALYSIS Carbon........ .60% Manganese..... .90% Silicon....... 1.90% Chromium...... .18% Vanadium...... .28% Molybdenum.... 1.28% Uses . . . Battering tools; blacksmith tools; boiler-shop
tools; bolt clippers; chisels for: blacksmithing, cold working, stone working and woodworking; chuck jaws; clutch parts; collets; concrete breakers; cold gripper dies; drill bushings; rotary slitter knives, cold shear knives; pipe cutters, pneumatic tools; center punches; screwdriver bits; cold (heavy gage) shear blades; cold stamps; and wrenches.

1000 1100

49 44

Forging . . . Start forging at 1850 to 2050 F (1010 to 1120


C), and do not forge below 1600 F (870 C).

RECOMMENDED HEAT TREATING PRACTICE Normalizing . . . Do not normalize. Annealing . . . Heat to 1425 to 1475 F (775 to 800 C). Use

Tempering Temp. (F) Hardness As-quenched Rc 300 400 500 600 700 60 59 59 58 57

lower limit for small sections, upper limit for large sections. Holding time varies from 1 hr for light sections and small furnace charges to 4 hr for large sections and large charges. Cool at a maximum rate of 25 F (14 C) per hour. Maximum rate not critical after cooling to about 950 F (510 C). Typical annealed hardness, 192 to 229 HB.

Stress Relieving . . . Optional. Heat to 1200 to 1250 F (650 to


675 C) and hold for 1 hr per inch of cross section (minimum of 1 hr). Cool in air.

Hardening . . . Heat slowly. Preheat at 1400 F (760 C).

Austenitize at 1600 to 1700 F (870 to 925 C), hold for 5 to 20 min, then quench in oil. Typical quenched hardness, 58 to and do not The data presented herein are typical values, 61 HRC. warrant suitability for any specific application or use of this material. 800 54
Normal variations in the chemical composition, the size of the product, and heat treatment parame ter may result in different values 51 for the 900 physical and mechanical properties. various

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Tempering . . . To prevent
cracking, temper within 10 min if quenched from 1600 F (870 C), 15 min if quenched from 1700 F (925 C). Temper at 350 to 800 F (175 to 425 C). Approximate tempered hardness as it corresponds to tempering temperature, 60 to 54 HRC.

The data presented herein are typical values, and do not warrant suitability for any specific application or use of this material. Normal variations in the chemical composition, the size of the product, and heat treatment parame ter may result in different values for the various physical and mechanical properties.

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