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17-4PH Stainless Steel CNC Machining: A Complete Guide (2026)

By Lucas Lo

Published: Apr. 07, 2026

Table of Contents

    17-4PH stainless steel (also known as UNS S17400 or AISI 630) is a high-strength, precipitation-hardening stainless steel widely used in CNC machining and precision engineering.

    17-4PH combines excellent strength, good corrosion resistance, and heat-treatable properties, making it ideal for demanding industries such as aerospace, oil & gas, medical, and industrial manufacturing.

    Compared to standard stainless steels, 17-4PH can achieve significantly higher hardness and strength after heat treatment while still maintaining good toughness and dimensional stability.

    In this guide, we will cover the key aspects of 17-4PH stainless steel, including its composition, properties, heat treatment, machinability, and applications, helping engineers and buyers better understand how to use this material effectively.17-4PH cnc machining

    Key Takeaways:

    • 17-4PH stainless steel can achieve very high strength and hardness through precipitation hardening (e.g., H900, H1025), making it suitable for demanding structural and load-bearing applications.
    • 17-4PH CNC machining must follow the typical process:Rough Machining-Heat Treatment-Fine Machining.

    1. What is 17-4 PH Stainless Steel?

    17-4 PH stainless steel is a martensitic, precipitation-hardening stainless steel. The “PH” stands for precipitation hardening, a heat treatment process that increases strength by forming fine particles within the material’s microstructure. This material is known for its high strength, good corrosion resistance, and excellent heat treatment response. It’s widely used in aerospace, petrochemical, food processing, and mold manufacturing.

    2. 17-4PH Chemical Composition (Typical)

    Here is the typical chemical composition of 17-4PH stainless steel.

    ElementContent (%)
    Chromium (Cr)15.0 – 17.5
    Nickel (Ni)3.0 – 5.0
    Copper (Cu)3.0 – 5.0
    Carbon (C)≤ 0.07
    Manganese (Mn)≤ 1.00
    Silicon (Si)≤ 1.00
    Phosphorus (P)≤ 0.040
    Sulfur (S)≤ 0.030
    Niobium (Nb) + Tantalum (Ta)0.15 – 0.45
    Iron (Fe)Balance (remainder)
    • Chromium (Cr)

    Chromium is one of the most important alloying elements in 17-4PH. Its main job is to improve corrosion resistance. When chromium reaches a certain level, it forms a dense, stable oxide film (passive layer) on the surface. This protective layer blocks oxygen, moisture, and other corrosive media from attacking the base material, significantly improving corrosion resistance in harsh environments.

    • Nickel (Ni)

    Nickel improves overall toughness and corrosion resistance while also stabilizing the microstructure. In 17-4PH, nickel enhances performance at low temperatures or under impact loading, reduces brittleness, and provides better ductility and fracture resistance without sacrificing strength. Nickel also helps optimize the metallurgical structure, making it more stable during heat treatment.

    • Copper (Cu) – The Key Element

    Copper is the critical element that enables precipitation hardening in 17-4PH. It’s what sets this material apart from standard stainless steels. During heat treatment, copper forms fine precipitate particles inside the material, dramatically increasing strength and hardness. This precipitation strengthening mechanism gives 17-4PH mechanical properties far superior to conventional austenitic stainless steels while maintaining good corrosion resistance. In short, copper is the heart of this material’s high-strength capability.

    • Niobium (Nb)

    Niobium primarily refines grain size and stabilizes the material’s structure. During heat treatment, niobium prevents excessive grain growth, which improves overall mechanical properties. It also enhances strength and dimensional stability after heat treatment, so parts maintain good performance even after high-temperature processing or long-term service. This is especially important for high-precision machined parts and CNC components.

    In summary, 17-4PH stainless steel is an iron-based, precipitation-hardening stainless steel containing approximately 15–17.5% chromium, 3–5% nickel, and 3–5% copper. Copper is what gives this material its high strength after heat treatment.

    3. 17-4PH Density

    The density of 17-4PH stainless steel is typically 7.75 – 7.80 g/cm³.

    4. 17-4PH Equivalent International Designations

    17-4PH is a precipitation-hardening stainless steel used worldwide. Different countries and standards have their own designations. Here’s a complete cross-reference.

    Country/RegionStandard/SpecificationEquivalent Designation
    USAUNSS17400
    USAAISI/ASTM630 (or 17-4PH)
    USAAMSAMS 5643, AMS 5622
    ChinaGB (New)05Cr17Ni4Cu4Nb
    ChinaGB (Old)0Cr17Ni4Cu4Nb
    JapanJISSUS630
    GermanyDINX5CrNiCu17-04
    GermanyW-Nr./SEW1.4542
    European UnionENX5CrNiCuNb16-4
    FranceRCCMZ6CNU17-04 (approximate)
    InternationalISOCorresponds to 1.4542 / X5CrNiCuNb16-4

    5. 17-4PH Mechanical Properties

    17-4PH offers excellent mechanical properties, especially after precipitation hardening heat treatment (H900, H1025, etc.), which significantly increases strength.

    In the H900 condition, tensile strength reaches 1310 MPa or higher, yield strength is approximately 1170 MPa, and hardness exceeds 40 HRC.

    While maintaining high strength, the material still retains decent toughness and fatigue resistance, making it ideal for critical structural components under high loads and stresses.

    Plus, by choosing different heat treatment conditions, you can strike the right balance between strength and toughness for your application.

    PropertyValueNotes
    Modulus of Elasticity196.5 – 204.2 GPaLargely independent of heat treatment
    Shear Modulus77 – 88 GPa
    Impact Toughness>25 JHigher aging temperature = better toughness
    Solution-Treated Hardness≤363 HB / ≤38 HRCAnnealed condition, easy to machine
    Reduction of Area40-50%Increases with aging temperature

    6. 17-4PH Physical Properties

    17-4PH has stable physical properties. Density is about 7.75–7.80 g/cm³, similar to other common stainless steels. The material is dense and offers good dimensional stability, which makes it well-suited for precision machining and high-accuracy assembly.

    Also, 17-4PH has low magnetic permeability and shows slight magnetism in some conditions. Keep this in mind if you’re using it in electronic or precision equipment.

    PropertyValueUnitNotes
    Density7.75 – 7.82g/cm³Common design value: 7.80 g/cm³
    Melting Point1400 – 1450°C 
    Specific Heat Capacity438 – 460J/(kg·K) 
    Modulus of Elasticity (Room Temp)200 – 205GPa~200 GPa in H900 condition
    Magnetic PropertiesMagneticMartensitic structure, ferromagnetic

    7. 17-4PH Thermal Properties

    PropertyValueUnitTemperature Condition
    Thermal Conductivity14.9 – 17.8W/(m·K)Room temperature (23°C)
    Thermal Conductivity~22.4W/(m·K)400°F (~204°C)
    Specific Heat Capacity438 – 460J/(kg·K)Room temperature
    Coefficient of Thermal Expansion10.8 – 11.9×10⁻⁶ /K21-93°C range
    Coefficient of Thermal Expansion~10.8×10⁻⁶ /°F400°F
    Maximum Service Temperature~300°CAbove this, over-aging occurs, strength drops

    From the table above, you can see that 17-4PH offers good thermal stability and moderate thermal conductivity. Its coefficient of thermal expansion is about 10.8–11.5 ×10⁻⁶ /K (in the 20–100°C range), which is slightly lower than austenitic stainless steels. That means better dimensional stability in environments with temperature changes.

    The material maintains good mechanical properties at moderately high temperatures, but for long-term service, I recommend keeping it below 300°C.

    Extended exposure above that temperature will coarsen the copper-rich strengthening phase (over-aging), and strength will drop significantly.

    8. 17-4PH Electrical Properties

    PropertyValueUnitNotes
    Electrical Resistivity0.77 – 1.00μΩ·m (or ×10⁻⁶ Ω·m) 
    Electrical Resistivity70 – 80μΩ·cmAlternative unit
    Temperature CoefficientK⁻¹Data not available, but typically increases with temperature

    17-4PH has relatively high electrical resistivity, around 0.75–0.80 μΩ·m. That’s significantly higher than copper or aluminum, so its electrical conductivity is poor.

    This material isn’t typically used for conductive applications, but its resistivity can be an advantage in structural components where some resistance is needed. Resistivity may vary slightly depending on heat treatment condition, but overall changes are minor.

    Because 17-4PH’s resistivity is in the moderate range, it’s suitable for EDM process (electrical discharge machining). Its conductivity is sufficient to maintain a stable discharge, giving you good machining efficiency.

    EDM photo

    9. Heat Treatment Conditions of 17-4PH

    17-4PH is a martensitic precipitation-hardening stainless steel. Its big advantage is that you can adjust its mechanical properties over a wide range through heat treatment.

    Unlike ordinary steels, 17-4PH heat treatment typically involves two main steps: Solution Treatment and Aging (Precipitation Hardening).

    Sometimes, you might also add a Conditioning Treatment in between to optimize overall performance.

    Step 1: Solution Treatment

    The first step is to dissolve all the strengthening alloying elements (copper, niobium, etc.) into the matrix, forming a uniform martensitic structure and preparing the material for precipitation hardening.

    ParameterSpecification
    Heating Temperature1020 – 1060°C (typically 1040°C)
    Holding TimeBased on cross-section thickness: typically 1 hour per 25mm of thickness, 30 minutes minimum
    Cooling MethodOil quench or air cool. Must cool rapidly to below 32°C to fully transform to martensite
    Resulting ConditionCondition A (solution-treated), hardness ≤363 HB / ≤38 HRC

    After solution treatment, don’t put the material into service in stress corrosion environments. Do your rough machining in the solution-treated condition – the material is relatively soft and easy to cut.

    Step 2: Conditioning Treatment – Optional Not A Must

    This is an optional but valuable intermediate step between solution treatment and aging. It adjusts the microstructure and improves overall mechanical properties, especially the balance between strength and ductility.

    ParameterSpecification
    Heating Temperature780°C
    PurposeImprove microstructural uniformity, enhance overall mechanical properties
    EffectResearch shows that the process: 1050°C solution + 780°C conditioning + 480°C aging gives 17-4PH its best strength-toughness combination

    Step 3: Aging (Precipitation Hardening)

    This is the core step for achieving high strength. The solution-treated material is metastable.

    By heating it to a specific temperature and holding, you cause nano-scale copper-rich phases (ε-Cu) and carbides to precipitate throughout the matrix. They act like “nano-sized nails” pinning dislocations, dramatically increasing strength and hardness.

    Aging CodeAging Temp (°C / °F)Typical Hardness (HRC)Tensile Strength (MPa)Elongation (%)Typical Applications
    H900470–490°C (880–910°F), typically 480°C (900°F)40–47≥1310≥10Maximum strength, wear parts, high-stress components
    H925496°C (925°F)38–45~1170~10Slightly better toughness than H900
    H1025540–560°C (1000–1040°F), typically 550°C (1025°F)35–42≥1060≥12Good balance of strength and toughness
    H1075570–590°C (1060–1095°F)31–39≥1000≥13Higher toughness, good corrosion resistance
    H1100593°C (1100°F)32–38~965~14
    H1150610–630°C (1130–1165°F)28–37≥930≥16Maximum toughness, stress corrosion resistance, weldments

    Note: The “900” in H900 stands for 900°F (approx. 482°C). These codes are based on the aging temperature in Fahrenheit.

    Here’s the key relationship for 17-4PH aging: The lower the aging temperature, the higher the strength and hardness you’ll get, but the lower the ductility and toughness. Conversely, the higher the aging temperature, the lower the strength and hardness, but the better the ductility and toughness.

    10. 17-4PH Weldability

    17-4PH stainless steel is a precipitation-hardening martensitic stainless steel, and its weldability is generally medium to difficult. Compared to austenitic stainless steels like 304 or 316, 17-4PH requires tighter control over heat input and process parameters. If you’re not careful, you can run into cracking, property degradation, and distortion. For high-precision CNC parts, you really need to pay attention here.

    During welding, the biggest challenge with 17-4PH is its high crack sensitivity, especially if you’re welding in a high-strength aged condition (H900, H1025). It’s more prone to hot cracking. Also, the material is sensitive to hydrogen. If your welding consumables or the environment have moisture, you can get hydrogen-induced cracking. Use low-hydrogen welding consumables and keep everything dry.

    On top of that, welding softens the heat-affected zone (HAZ), which affects local strength and overall performance. Heat input and residual stresses can also cause distortion, which is a big deal for parts with tight dimensional tolerances. Plan your welding sequence carefully and use fixtures to control distortion.

    For the process itself, TIG, MIG, or laser welding are typical. TIG is better for precision parts. For filler metal, ER630 is common to match strength. In some cases, ER308L or ER309L can be used to improve toughness. Keep heat input low, use intermittent welding, and control interpass temperature.

    Post-weld heat treatment (PWHT) is critical for restoring properties. You’ll typically need to do an aging treatment (H900 or H1025) to recover mechanical properties. In some cases, you might need to solution treat and then age. Skip the PWHT, and the weld region won’t meet design requirements.

    For CNC manufacturing, I recommend this sequence: Rough machine → Weld → Heat treat → Finish machine. In the design phase, avoid placing welds in highly stressed areas, and leave machining stock to compensate for distortion from welding and heat treatment. With good process control, 17-4PH is still an excellent, high-strength material.

    11. 17-4PH Corrosion Resistance

    In most environments, 17-4PH’s corrosion resistance is comparable to 304 stainless steel and generally better than the 400 series martensitic stainless steels. That’s why it’s a great choice for applications that need a combination of moderate corrosion resistance and ultra-high strength.

    However, 17-4PH is sensitive to pitting and crevice corrosion. Compared to 304 and 316, it’s less resistant in chloride-containing environments. In marine or high-salt spray environments, you’ll see pitting and crevice corrosion more readily.

    17-4PH is not suitable for long-term exposure to strong acids, strong alkalis, or high-chloride environments. Those conditions will accelerate corrosion damage. Also, under high stress combined with a corrosive medium, you can get stress corrosion cracking (SCC). For high-precision or high-load structures, this is a major concern.

    Corrosion Resistance Comparison with Other Stainless Steels

    MaterialPitting/Crevice Corrosion ResistanceSCC ResistanceGeneral Corrosion ResistanceStrength
    17-4PH (H1150)MediumGoodGoodHigh
    17-4PH (H900)MediumPoorGoodHighest
    304/304LMediumMediumExcellentLow
    316/316LGoodMediumExcellentLow
    410 (Martensitic)PoorPoorFairMedium

    12. 17-4PH CNC Machining

    In the solution-treated condition, 17-4PH is easy to machine.  But once it’s aged, it becomes a classic “difficult-to-machine” material.

    Overall, I’d rate 17-4PH’s CNC machinability as medium to difficult. That said, compared to high-strength alloys or some tool steels, it still has decent overall machinability. With the right process, you can achieve high accuracy and good surface finish.

    12.1 Main Machining Challenges

    • High Hardness and Work Hardening

    17-4PH has a significant work-hardening tendency.

    During cutting, the surface hardens rapidly. If your parameters aren’t right (e.g., feed rate too low, dull tool), you’ll get: rapidly increasing cutting forces, accelerated tool wear, and poor surface finish.

    • Tool Wear

    Aged 17-4PH (H900 condition) has a hardness of 40-47 HRC. That’s tough on tools – both abrasive and adhesive wear are significant. Data shows that optimized tool designs can reduce cutting temperature by 26%, surface roughness by 28%, and flank wear by 21% compared to conventional tools.

    • Residual Stress and Distortion

    After removing a lot of material, the original stress balance in the part is disrupted. Residual stresses redistribute, causing distortion. This is especially problematic for thin-wall parts and long shafts.

    Take an aerospace flange we did: 97mm max OD, only 1.4mm at the thinnest section, with a flatness requirement of 0.003mm. Residual stress relief was the main cause of dimensional problems.

    • Low Thermal Conductivity

    17-4PH’s thermal conductivity is about 15 W/(m·K), roughly 1/3 that of carbon steel. That means heat builds up in the cutting zone, leading to: softening of the cutting edge, higher cutting temperatures, and compromised accuracy and surface integrity.

    12.2 Tool Selection

    Machining StageRecommended ToolCoatingNotes
    Roughing (Solution-Treated)CarbideTiAlN / AlTiNGood value, good wear resistance
    Finishing (Solution-Treated)CarbideTiAlN / AlTiNSharp cutting edge
    Aged Condition (H900/H1025)High-performance carbide / CBNAlTiN / TiSiNHigh wear resistance, high hot hardness
    Ultra-PrecisionCBN / CeramicFor high-hardness conditions

    12.3 Cutting Parameters

    Turning 17-4PH Parameters (Solution-Treated, ~35 HRC):

    ParameterRecommended RangeNotes
    Cutting Speed (Vc)80-150 m/minKeep speed lower to avoid overheating
    Feed Rate (f)0.1-0.25 mm/revAvoid low feeds to prevent work hardening
    Depth of Cut (ap)0.5-2.5 mmUse higher values for roughing
    CoolantFlood, high pressureMandatory

    Milling 17-4PH Parameters (Aged, H900, ~45 HRC):

    ParameterRecommended RangeNotes
    Cutting Speed (Vc)40-80 m/minSignificantly reduced
    Feed per Tooth (fz)0.03-0.10 mm/toothKeep feed positive
    Depth of Cut (ap)0.2-1.0 mmUse lower values for finishing

    Note: These cutting parameters are based on our actual machining experience. Your shop’s equipment and experience may differ, so adjust accordingly.

    12.4 Coolant

    Adequate coolant is mandatory when machining 17-4PH.

    13. Design Considerations for CNC Machining 7-4PH

    When designing parts from 17-4PH stainless steel, you need to consider its high strength, heat treatment sensitivity, and welding characteristics.

    13.1 Primary Principle: Design for Two-Stage Machining

    The unique thing about 17-4PH is that its properties change dramatically with heat treatment. 17-4PH CNC machining must follow the typical process: Rough Machining-Heat Treatment-Fine Machining.

    Machining StageMaterial ConditionHardnessDesign Focus
    Stage 1: RoughingSolution-Treated (Condition A)~30-35 HRCEfficient material removal, reasonable tool life
    Stage 2: FinishingAged (H900/H1150)35-47 HRCDifficult machining, light cuts, demands quality tools and machines

    13.1.1 Design for “Stock Allowance”

    For any high-precision mating surface (tolerances ≤0.01mm) or high-finish surface, you must leave 0.2-0.5mm of finishing stock. This stock is left while the material is in the easy-to-machine solution-treated condition. After aging hardens the part, you remove this stock via hard turning, hard milling, or grinding to hit final dimensions.

    13.1.2 Design for “Single Setup”

    Design all critical high-precision features (holes, shoulders, surfaces) so they can be machined in the same orientation or same setup. During both roughing (solution-treated) and finishing (aged), minimize re-fixturing. In the aged, high-hardness condition, any error from a second setup is hard to correct, and the clamping itself can damage finished surfaces.

    13.2 Geometry Design for Efficient Cutting

    During the solution-treated roughing stage, the goal is high material removal rates. Here’s what helps.

    FeatureRecommendedAvoidImpact on CNC Machining
    Deep HolesStep drills, or specify gun drillingStraight smooth holes with L/D > 10Chip evacuation is tough, coolant doesn’t reach the cut, high risk of work hardening and tool breakage
    Cavities/PocketsGenerous corner radii (R ≥ 3mm or 15% of cutter diameter)Sharp inside corners (R=0)Sharp corners cause high tool loads, vibration, chipping, and difficulty cleaning out
    Thin WallsWall thickness > 1.5mm, add ribsLarge-area thin walls (≤1mm)Chatter, poor surface finish, dimensional problems, distortion
    ThreadsStandard threads that can be tapped; for high-strength aged condition, use thread inserts or ground threadsThreads in deep blind holes; non-standard coarse-pitch threads in aged conditionTapping in aged condition is risky (tool breakage); coarse-pitch threads require thread milling or single-point threading
    Floor and Side WallFloor perpendicular to side wallSide wall angle < 90°Sharp angles require small-diameter, long-reach tools – poor rigidity, low efficiency

    13.3 Fixturing and Workholding Design

    17-4PH is weakly magnetic in the solution-treated condition and more strongly magnetic when aged. Use this to your advantage.

    StrategyRecommended PracticeBenefit for CNC Machining
    Provide a Flat Pickup SurfaceDesign a large, flat surface on the part for vacuum or magnetic chuck pickupEliminates vises and clamps. Stress-free workholding. Critical for thin-wall or distortion-prone parts.
    Provide Tooling Tabs / Fixture BossesAdd removable tooling tabs or fixture bosses on non-functional areas for clampingAllows you to put high clamping forces on sacrificial features. The main part sees no stress.
    Design Datum FeaturesClearly specify one flat surface and two holes as machining datums (3-2-1 locating)Gives your programmer and setup person a repeatable, unambiguous reference. Reduces human error.

    13.4 Programming and Process Recommendations

    Based on the design features above, here’s how your CAM programming should adjust.

    StrategySolution-Treated (Roughing)Aged (Finishing)
    ToolpathTrochoidal milling or dynamic milling. Control radial engagement, keep tool load constant.Contouring or helical strategies. Avoid sudden engagement or disengagement.
    Cutting ParametersHigh speed (80-150 m/min), heavy depth of cut (1-2D), moderate feedLow speed (40-80 m/min), light depth of cut (0.1-0.3mm), high feed (to make up for lost MRR)
    CoolantFlood coolantHigh-pressure through-spindle coolant (≥70 bar). Needed to break hard, brittle chips.
    DeburringDesign in 45° chamfers or radii to reduce burr formationFor cross-holes and edges, use ceramic fiber brushes or electrochemical deburring. Avoid manual deburring – it damages precision.

    13.5 Design Checklist for 17-4PH Machining

    Here’s our internal checklist for 17-4PH parts:

    Workholding/Datums: Is there a flat, continuous surface for vacuum or magnetic chuck pickup?

    Stock Allowance: Are high-precision features (bearing fits, seal surfaces) clearly noted as “rough machine, finish after heat treat”?

    Radii and Transitions: Do all internal vertical corners have adequate radii (R ≥ cutter radius)?

    Deep Holes: For holes deeper than 10x diameter, are they specified as step drills or gun drilling?

    Thin Walls: Is wall thickness > 1.5mm? If thinner, are ribs added or supports specified?

    Threads: Does the drawing specify whether threads are machined “before aging” or “after aging”? For small threads after aging, are thread inserts recommended?

    Tooling Aids: Are removable tooling tabs or fixture bosses allowed for clamping?

    Tolerance Clusters: Are tight-tolerance features grouped so they can be machined in a single setup?

    14. Typical Applications of 17-4PH

    Here are typical applications for 17-4PH across different industries.

    14.1 Aerospace and Defense

    This is one of the most important application areas for 17-4PH. Typical parts: landing gear components, turbine engine blades, structural fasteners, helicopter deck tie-down grids. The material maintains excellent strength up to 316°C (600°F) and meets strict aerospace specs like AMS 5643. It’s a go-to material for critical moving parts on aircraft.

    14.2 Oil, Gas, and Marine Engineering

    Downhole and offshore platforms face high pressure, hydrogen sulfide (H₂S), and seawater corrosion. Typical 17-4PH parts: pump shafts, valve stems and discs, downhole tool joints, flanges, and fasteners.

    14.3 Nuclear Industry

    Typical parts: drive screws for reactor control rod mechanisms, internal structural components for dry spent fuel storage containers, valves for safety-related piping.

    14.4 Medical and Biomedical

    This is an emerging application area for 17-4PH. Typical parts: temporary fracture fixation devices (locking screws, fixation pins), surgical instruments, dental tools.

    14.5 Chemical and Food Processing

    When you need both corrosion resistance and mechanical strength, 17-4PH is a good choice. Examples: fractionators in pulp and paper, pump bodies and mixing blades in food processing, high-pressure reactor fasteners in chemical plants.

    Its corrosion resistance is comparable to 304 stainless steel, and after aging, surface hardness can reach 40 HRC or higher. That makes it effective against abrasive wear from media containing solid particles.

    15. Summary

    17-4PH stainless steel is a mid-to-high-end material in CNC machining. It’s not the most common everyday material, but it’s very common in applications that need high strength, good corrosion resistance, and stable properties.

    In this blog, we’ve expored 17-4PH material properties – especially heat treatment – and gone into detail on the challenges and design considerations for CNC machining this alloy.

    If you need 17-4PH machining services, we are ready to help.

    16. FAQ

    Q1: Is 17-4PH suitable for CNC machining?

    Yes. 17-4PH is widely used in CNC machining. It offers high strength and good corrosion resistance. However, it’s more difficult to machine than aluminum or free-machining stainless steel due to its hardness and work-hardening tendency.

    Q2: Can 17-4PH be heat treated after machining?

    Yes. The material is usually machined in the solution-treated condition, then heat treated (aged) to achieve final mechanical properties. This process can cause slight dimensional changes, so final precision machining is often required after heat treatment.

    Q3: Is 17-4PH corrosion resistant?

    Yes. It provides good corrosion resistance in general environments, including atmospheric and mild industrial conditions. However, it’s less corrosion resistant than 304 or 316 stainless steel, especially in high-chloride or marine environments.

    Q4: Is 17-4PH magnetic?

    Yes. Unlike austenitic stainless steels, 17-4PH is magnetic due to its martensitic structure. Its magnetic properties may vary depending on the heat treatment condition.

    Q5: Is 17-4 the same as 17-4PH?

    Yes, they’re essentially the same. “17-4” is a common shorthand for 17-4PH stainless steel. Both terms refer to the same material, but “17-4PH” is the formal designation, especially when specifying heat treatment conditions.

    Q6: How do you heat treat 17-4PH stainless steel?

    Heat treatment usually involves two stages: solution treatment and aging. The material is heated to a high temperature to dissolve alloying elements, then rapidly cooled, followed by aging at a lower temperature (H900, H1150, etc.) to achieve the desired strength and hardness.

    Q7: What is 17-4PH Condition A?

    Condition A refers to the solution-treated state of 17-4PH. In this condition, the material is relatively soft and ductile, making it suitable for machining before final aging heat treatment.

    Q8: What is 17-4PH Condition H900?

    H900 is a heat-treated condition where the material is aged at approximately 480°C (900°F). It provides very high strength and hardness, but lower toughness compared to higher-temperature aging conditions.

    Q9: What is the hardness of 17-4PH (Rockwell C)?

    Hardness varies by condition:

    Condition A: relatively soft (~20–30 HRC)

    H900: very hard (~40–45 HRC)

    H1150: lower hardness (~28–33 HRC) but better toughness

    Q10: What is 17-4PH H1150?

    H1150 is a higher-temperature aging condition (~620°C). It results in lower strength but higher toughness and better corrosion resistance, making it suitable for applications requiring impact resistance.

    Q11: What’s the difference between H900 and H1150?

    H900 provides maximum strength and hardness,but lower toughness and corrosion resistance.

    H1150 provides better toughness and corrosion resistance, but lower strength.

    Q12: Do you support prototyping and mass production?

    Yes. CNC machining services typically support both prototype development and mass production. Prototypes are used for testing and validation, while mass production focuses on consistency, efficiency, and cost control.

    Lucas

    Lucas is a technical writer at ECOREPRAP. He has eight years of CNC programming and operating experience, including five-axis programming. He’s a lifelong learner who loves sharing his expertise.

    Learn More about Lucas.

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