Steve: I am not a metallurgist, but my recollection of the best type of stainless steel to use is 316L. The 'L' means low carbon, which is lower than regular 316. From surfing it seems the 'L' is needed if the material will be welded, but not otherwise. 316 is the most resistant to acid - that is the best for salt water exposure. My guess is the 18/3 designation is 18% chrome, 3% moly (max). For some other SS alloys the numbers seem to indicate chrome/nickle content. I have no clue as to where designations like 304 and 316 come from. I either slept through that class or played hookey. Anyone know why? I found some web sites on the subject: http://www.diveweb.com/maritech/features/uw-su99.01.htm http://chemistry.about.com/library/weekly/aa071201a.htm I also found hits for "stainless 316" on surgical apparatus and body piercing web sites as well! Steve R. M-15 #119 Lexington, KY --- "Steve McClellan (at Home)" <stevemc35@attbi.com> wrote:
If any of you metallurgists out there want to correct me as to the best grade of stainless to use, please do! (I am only repeating what I read on a web site somewhere.)
I'm not a metallurgist either, but because I've read 100's of liability-case related documents on the properties of stainless steel, I know that 316 is much more resistant to stress corrossion than 304. ----- Original Message ----- From: "Steve R" <stever@mail.saabnet.com> To: <montgomery_boats@mailman.xmission.com> Sent: Saturday, April 13, 2002 8:29 AM Subject: M_Boats: m-15 pivot pin Steve: I am not a metallurgist, but my recollection of the best type of stainless steel to use is 316L. The 'L' means low carbon, which is lower than regular 316. From surfing it seems the 'L' is needed if the material will be welded, but not otherwise. 316 is the most resistant to acid - that is the best for salt water exposure. My guess is the 18/3 designation is 18% chrome, 3% moly (max). For some other SS alloys the numbers seem to indicate chrome/nickle content. I have no clue as to where designations like 304 and 316 come from. I either slept through that class or played hookey. Anyone know why? I found some web sites on the subject: http://www.diveweb.com/maritech/features/uw-su99.01.htm http://chemistry.about.com/library/weekly/aa071201a.htm I also found hits for "stainless 316" on surgical apparatus and body piercing web sites as well! Steve R. M-15 #119 Lexington, KY --- "Steve McClellan (at Home)" <stevemc35@attbi.com> wrote:
If any of you metallurgists out there want to correct me as to the best grade of stainless to use, please do! (I am only repeating what I read on
a
web site somewhere.)
_______________________________________________ http://mailman.xmission.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/montgomery_boats
participants (2)
-
Honshells -
Steve R