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Stainless steel stamping parts - medical and kitchen components

Stainless Steel tā

Stainless steel tā produces durable, corrosion-resistant components for the most demanding applications in medical, food processing, marine, waka, aerospace, chemical processing, and industrial environments. As spestainless steel tā konganukutal tā, we understand the unique challenges of forming this material — higher forming forces, work hardening behavior, and springback compensation — and deliver defect-free parts that meet your exact specifications.

To tatou stainless steel tā capabilities include mate ahu whakamua tā, deep drawing, blanking, piercing,stainless steel grades coining in austenitic, ferritic, martensitic, and precipitation-hardened stainless steel grades from 0.004 inches to 0.250 inches thick.

Stainless Steel Grades We Stamp

GradeTypeKey PropertiesTikanga Applications
301AusteniticHigh work-hardening rate, good springinessSprings, clips, retainers, structural parts
302/304AusteniticExcellent corrosion resistance, most common gradeMedical, food equipment, kitchen, architecture
316AusteniticSuperior corrosion resistance (Mo added)Marine, chemical processing, pharmaceutical
409FerriticGood heat resistance, lower costwaka exhaust, heat exchangers
410MartensiticHardenable, moderate corrosion resistanceCutlery, valve parts, fasteners
430FerriticMagnetic, good formability, decorativeAppliance trim, waka trim, kitchenware
17-4 PHPrecipitation HardenedVery high strength after heat treatmentAerospace, medical implants, high-load parts

304, 316 and 316L Stainless Steel tā Selection

304 stainless steel tā is the common choice for general corrosion resistance, food equipment, appliance parts, and medical components. 316 stainless steel adds molybdenum for better chloride and marine-environment resistance. 316L stainless steel uses lower carbon content to reduce carbide precipitation after welding, making it suitable for welded housings, medical assemblies, and corrosion-sensitive wāhanga kua tāngia.

Challenges of tā Stainless Steel

Stainless steel is more challenging to stamp than carbon steel or aluminum due to several material characteristics:

  • Higher forming forces — stainless steel requires 50-70% more tonnage than equivalent carbon steel, demanding heavier presses and more robust tooling
  • Work hardening — austenitic grades (301, 304, 316) harden rapidly during forming, requiring careful process planning to avoid cracking
  • Springback — stainless steel springs back more than carbon steel after bending, requiring over-bend compensation in die design
  • Galling — stainless has a tendency to gall (cold weld) against tooling surfaces, requiring specialized die coatings and lubricants
  • Surface sensitivity — scratches and die marks are more visible on stainless steel’s bright surface, demanding polished tooling and careful handling

To tatou experience with stainless steel tā means we engineer solutions for all these challenges, delivering parts that meet dimensional requirements without surface defects.

Applications

  • Medical and surgical — instrument components, implant parts, device housings, surgical tray brackets, and sterilization equipment
  • Food processing — equipment housings, conveyor components, mixer parts, and sanitary fittings
  • Marine hardware — deck fittings, rigging hardware, fasteners, and structural brackets
  • waka — exhaust system components, trim pieces, fuel system parts, and under-hood brackets
  • Chemical processing — reactor components, valve parts, gaskets, and equipment brackets
  • Architecture — decorative panels, facade brackets, handrail fittings, and elevator components

Surface Finishing

  • Passivation — chemical treatment per ASTM A967 to restore the protective oxide layer after tā
  • Electropolishing — electrochemical polishing for ultra-smooth, hygienic surfaces (medical, pharmaceutical)
  • Mechanical polishing — mirror, satin, or brushed finishes for decorative applications
  • PVD coating — titanium nitride or similar coatings for wear resistance and decorative color

Stainless Steel tā Specifications

Use this capability table to match stainless steel grades, material thickness, tolerance considerations, finishing requirements, and production needs to your stamped part project.

<tā konganuku partskness
SpecificationStainless Steel tā Rauemi
Stainless grades301, 302/304, 316, 409, 410, 430, 17-4 PH and other austenitic, ferritic, martensitic, and precipitation-hardened grades.
0.004 in to 0.250 in, depending on grade, hardness, geometry, burr limits, and forming requirements.
Typical tolerancesTight tolerances are available for critical features; springback, work hardening, grain direction, and burr control should be reviewed during DFM.
tā processesmate ahu whakamua tā, deep drawing, blanking, piercing, bending, forming, and coining.
Production volumePrototype, pilot run, and production quantities; progressive dies are recommended for repeat high-volume stainless steel wāhanga kua tāngia.
Suitable partsMedical components, food equipment parts, springs, clips, retainers, shields, brackets, kitchen hardware, and marine hardware.
Surface finishesMill finish, brushing, polishing, passivation, electropolishing, bead blasting, deburring, and cleaning.
IndustriesMedical, food processing, marine, waka, aerospace, chemical processing, and industrial equipment.
RFQ pathProvide drawings, stainless grade, thickness, finish/passivation needs, tolerance class, annual volume, and corrosion or cleanliness requirements through the whakapā/quote page.

Tonoa He Korero

whakapā mai at [email protected] or call +86 152-5047-1868.

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Tonoa He Korero

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