16NiCrS4 1.5715 Hot Forged Alloy Steel Round Bar
16NiCrS4 1.5715 Hot Forged Alloy Steel Round Bar
Model
16NiCrS4 1.5715

Item specifics

Delivery Condition
+QT or annealed
Surface Condition
black or grounded or peeled

Review

Description

16NiCrS4 1.5715 Case Hardening Steels

 

Grade :16NiCrS4  Number: 1.5715 Classification: Alloy special steel

Supplying Size:Forging: 80-600mm


Standard:

EN 10277-4: 2008 Bright steel products. Technical delivery conditions. Case hardening steels

EN 10084: 2008 Case hardening steels. Technical delivery conditions

 

Equivalent grades of steel 16NiCrS4 (1.5715)

EU

USA

Italy

Sweden

EN

-

UNI

SS

16NiCrS4

3115

16NiCrS4

SS2511

 

Chemical composition %

C

Si

Mn

Ni

P

S

Cr

0.13 - 0.19

max   0.4

0.7 - 1

0.8 - 1.1

max   0.025

0.02 - 0.04

0.6 - 1

 

Mechanical properties of 16NiCrS4 (1.5715)

Steel name

Steel number

Thickness mm

+A + turned (+A +SH) Hardness HBW max.

+A + cold drawn (+A +C) Hardness HBW max.

+FP + turned (+FP +SH) Hardness HBW

+FP + cold drawn (+FP +C) Hardness HBW

16NiCrS4

1.5715

≥5 ≤10

-

270

-

-

> 10 ≤16

-

260

-

-

> 16 ≤40

217

255

156 to 207

156 to 245

> 40 ≤63

217

255

156 to 207

156 to 240

>63 ≤100

217

255

156 to 207

156 to 240

+A= soft annealed

+FP= treated to ferrite-pearlite structure and hardness range

 

Finished condition

a) drawn, symbol +C;

b) turned, symbol +SH;

c) ground, symbol +SL.

 

Heat Treatment

Process

time

Temperatures

Austenitizing

30 - 35 min

880℃

Carburizing

 

880 - 980℃

Core-hardening

 

850 - 890℃

Case-hardening

 

780 - 820℃

Tempering

1 h minimum

150 - 200℃

 

Introduction

16NiCrS4 is a low-alloy (chrome-nickel) case-hardening steel. Machining of larger components with complex shape, e.g. gear wheels, is facilitated by the steel being soft-annealed after forging to achieve a hardness of 217 HB or below.

 

16NiCrS4 is standardised in SS-EN ISO 683 - 3. The hardness as supplied corresponds to “+A” (soft annealed). The (discontinued) SS-designation is 2511.

 

Base hardenability is an important characteristic of case-hardening steels since it determines core properties after hardening and tempering. It is normally specified in terms of a Jominy diagram, which gives the hardness distribution as read off on a sample which has been hardened by directing a spray of water at its one end according to a standardised procedure. The addendum “+HL” after the steel name signifies that the analysis is controlled such that the Jominy curve lies between limits which are stipulated in the SS-EN ISO 683 - 3 standard.

 

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