Alloy vs Alloy Comparisons
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Head-to-head comparisons of widely used alloys, examining composition, mechanical properties, corrosion resistance, machinability, cost, and typical applications to help engineers make informed material selection decisions.
304 vs 316 Stainless Steel: Which One Do You Need?
304 and 316 are the two most widely used austenitic stainless steels. The key difference is molybdenum: 316 contains 2-3% Mo, which dramatically improves pitting resistance in chloride environments.
6061 vs 7075 Aluminum: Strength, Weldability, and Cost
6061 and 7075 are the two most common structural aluminum alloys. 6061-T6 offers balanced properties and excellent weldability, while 7075-T6 provides nearly double the strength but cannot be fusion welded.
Titanium Grade 5 vs Grade 2: Alloy Strength vs Pure Simplicity
Grade 2 is commercially pure titanium valued for corrosion resistance and formability. Grade 5 (Ti-6Al-4V) is an alpha-beta alloy with more than double the strength, dominating aerospace and medical implant applications.
Inconel 625 vs 718: Corrosion Champion vs Structural Workhorse
Inconel 625 is a solid-solution strengthened alloy prized for broad corrosion resistance. Inconel 718 is precipitation hardened to much higher strength, making it the dominant superalloy for jet engine and oil-gas applications.
1045 vs 4140 Steel: Plain Carbon vs Alloy Workhorse
1045 is a medium-carbon plain steel that is cost-effective and easy to source. 4140 adds chromium and molybdenum for deeper hardenability and higher toughness, making it the default engineering alloy steel.
Brass vs Bronze: Copper Alloy Showdown
Brass is copper alloyed with zinc for machinability and formability. Bronze is copper alloyed with tin, aluminum, or silicon for strength and marine corrosion resistance. The choice depends on environment, strength needs, and manufacturing method.
A36 vs 1018 Steel: Structural Plate vs Precision Bar
ASTM A36 is a structural steel specified by minimum yield strength for beams and plate. AISI 1018 is specified by composition and is the standard cold-drawn bar for machined parts. They serve different markets despite similar carbon content.
Hastelloy C-276 vs Monel 400: Extreme Corrosion Resistance Compared
C-276 is the go-to nickel alloy for mixed acid environments and oxidizing-reducing conditions. Monel 400 excels in reducing acids and seawater. Understanding which corrosion mechanism dominates guides the choice.
Cast Iron vs Steel: When Carbon Content Changes Everything
Cast iron (over 2.14% carbon) and steel (under 2.14% carbon) are both iron-carbon alloys, but the higher carbon fundamentally changes castability, machinability, damping, and mechanical behavior.
Copper vs Aluminum for Electrical Conductors
Copper has 61% better electrical conductivity than aluminum, but aluminum weighs 70% less. The choice depends on space constraints, weight limits, termination methods, and total installed cost.
Tool Steel D2 vs M2: Cold Work vs High-Speed Cutting
D2 is a cold-work tool steel prized for wear resistance in stamping and blanking dies. M2 is a high-speed steel designed to maintain cutting edge hardness at red heat during machining operations.
Duplex vs Austenitic Stainless Steel: Strength Meets Corrosion Resistance
Duplex stainless steels combine corrosion resistance of austenitic grades with roughly double the yield strength, enabling thinner wall sections. The tradeoff is a lower maximum service temperature and more demanding fabrication.