DIN Grades Steel
DIN Grades Steel
DIN Grades Steel
Steel grades
Steel grades to classify various steels by their composition and physical properties have been developed by a
number of standards organizations.
• SAE steel grades
• British Standards
• International Organization for Standardization ISO/TS 4949:2003
• European standards - EN 10027
• For alloys in general (including steel), unified numbering system (UNS) of ASTM International and the Society
of Automotive Engineers (SAE).
• Japanese steel grades : JIS standard
• Germany steel grades : DIN standard
• China steel grades : GB standard
Category 1
Basic steel grade designations for category 1 steels consist of a single EN 10027-1 steel grade designation system.
letter (designating application) then a number signifying the
mechanical property (often yield strength) dictated in the standard for that application designation. For some
application designations another letter is included before the property value, this number is used to indicate any
special requirements or conditions. These additional letters and values depend entirely on the application of the steel
and are specified in the standard and far too numerous to mention here.
Below is a table indicating the most common application codes.
S Structural steel
E Engineering steels
Category 2
These steel grades often begin with a letter (absence of a letter indicates non-alloy steel with Mn >1% or alloy steel
with all alloying elements <5% by weight). The most common of these letters are C (Carbon) and X (Alloying
element >5% is present). Subsequent to this letter is the carbon quantity by weight given as the percentage multiplied
by 100. Following on from this are the alloying elements in order of decreasing weight percentage. Finally there is a
series of numbers. Unless the type code is X or HS these numbers correspond (in the order respective to the alloying
elements given earlier) to the value of the aforementioned alloying element multiplied by that element's adjustment
factor (given in the standard). If an alloying element is present without an adjustment factor then that element's
quantity is unknown or unimportant but is mentioned because it is added on purpose to the alloy. E.g. 13MnNi6-3
(0.13% Carbon, 1.5% Manganese, 0.75% Nickel)
Elements Factor
Ce, N, P, S 100
B 1000
If the type code is X, the numbers following the alloying elements are the actual percentage by weight of the
corresponding alloying element.
In the case of High speed steels the code differs. Beginning with the letter HS signifying the type then the addition of
four or less numbers signifying the percentages of the following alloying elements in order: Tungsten, Molybdenum,
Vanadium, Cobalt. E.g. HS2-9-1-8 (2% Tungsten, 9% Molybdenum, 1% Vanadium, 8% Cobalt).
Additional symbols
In addition to the above category codes there are symbols that can be added to the grade code to identify any
additional compositional requirements, delivery conditions, mechanical properties, &c. These values depend solely
on the type/application code given in the first part of the code and are so numerous as to be impossible to indicate
here. Additional symbols are separated from the main code by the plus sign (+).
The most common additional symbols are the impact and temperature codes for structural steels, category 1 - Sxxx.
J 27 J R Room temperature
K 40 J O 0°C
L 60 J 2 -20°C
3 -30°C
4 -40°C
5 -50°C
6 -60°C
Delivery condition codes are also relatively common, the most common being:
Steel grades 3
Code Condition
A Annealed
N Normalised
SR Stress relieved
C Cold worked
U Untreated
Code Type
Non-alloy steels
1x Special steels
Alloy steels
2x Tool steels
3x Miscellaneous steels
Comparison
Below is a table comparing steel grades from different grading systems.
Steel grades 4
Carbon steels
Alloy steels
Stainless steels
410 S41000
440A S44002
Tool steels
A-3 [5]
T30103
A-4 [6]
T30104
A-6 [7]
T30106
A-7 [8]
T30107
A-8 [9]
T30108
A-9 [10]
T30109
References
Notes
[1] EN 10027, European committee for standardisation
[2] "Standards comparison" (http:/ / metricmetal. com/ standards_comparison. htm). . Retrieved 2008-12-31..
[3] Oberg, pp. 411-412.
[4] AISI A2 (http:/ / www. webcitation. org/ 5vFGMZ1wV), Efunda, archived from the original (http:/ / www. efunda. com/ materials/ alloys/
tool_steels/ show_tool. cfm?ID=AISI_A2& show_prop=all& Page_Title=AISI A2) on 2010-12-25, , retrieved 2010-12-25.
[5] AISI A3 (http:/ / www. webcitation. org/ 5vFGQq3xA), Efunda, archived from the original (http:/ / www. efunda. com/ materials/ alloys/
tool_steels/ show_tool. cfm?ID=AISI_A3& show_prop=all& Page_Title=AISI A3) on 2010-12-25, , retrieved 2010-12-25.
[6] AISI A4 (http:/ / www. webcitation. org/ 5vFGbt3Cy), Efunda, archived from the original (http:/ / www. efunda. com/ materials/ alloys/
tool_steels/ show_tool. cfm?ID=AISI_A4& show_prop=all& Page_Title=AISI A4) on 2010-12-25, , retrieved 2010-12-25.
[7] AISI A6 (http:/ / www. webcitation. org/ 5vFGon2de), Efunda, archived from the original (http:/ / www. efunda. com/ materials/ alloys/
tool_steels/ show_tool. cfm?ID=AISI_A6& show_prop=all& Page_Title=AISI A6) on 2010-12-25, , retrieved 2010-12-25.
[8] AISI A7 (http:/ / www. webcitation. org/ 5vFGw8Bhe), Efunda, archived from the original (http:/ / www. efunda. com/ materials/ alloys/
tool_steels/ show_tool. cfm?ID=AISI_A7& show_prop=all& Page_Title=AISI A7) on 2010-12-25, , retrieved 2010-12-25.
[9] AISI A8 (http:/ / www. webcitation. org/ 5vFH565FE), Efunda, archived from the original (http:/ / www. efunda. com/ materials/ alloys/
tool_steels/ show_tool. cfm?ID=AISI_A8& show_prop=all& Page_Title=AISI A8) on 2010-12-25, , retrieved 2010-12-25.
[10] AISI A9 (http:/ / www. webcitation. org/ 5vFHCCD2B), Efunda, archived from the original (http:/ / www. efunda. com/ materials/ alloys/
tool_steels/ show_tool. cfm?ID=AISI_A9& show_prop=all& Page_Title=AISI A9) on 2010-12-25, , retrieved 2010-12-25.
Bibliography
• Oberg, E.; et al. (1996), Machinery's Handbook (25th ed.), Industrial Press Inc
External links
• Comparison of various steel standards (http://www.hagener-feinstahl.de/werkstoffliste2007.php?lng=en)
• Comparison of various tool steel standards (http://www.westyorkssteel.com/tool_steel_specifications.html)
• Stainless Steel: Tables of Technical Properties (EN steel grades) (http://www.euro-inox.org/pdf/map/
Tables_TechnicalProperties_EN.pdf)
• General guide to the EN 10027 steel name and numbering systems. (http://www.roymech.co.uk/
Useful_Tables/Matter/Steel_Europe.html)
Article Sources and Contributors 7
License
Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported
//creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/