JIS S48C Steel: AISI 1049 Equivalent — High-Carbon Grade for Surface Hardening

JIS S48C is a medium-high carbon machine structural steel defined under JIS G4051, with a carbon content of 0.45–0.51%. It sits one step above S45C in the carbon ladder, delivering induction-hardened surface hardness of HRC 56–62 — a meaningful step up for sliding surfaces, sprockets, crankshafts, and cams where S45C hardness margins are too tight. Weldability is severely restricted. Internationally it aligns with AISI 1049 (USA) and is close to DIN C50 (Germany).

Table of Contents
  1. International Equivalent Grades
  2. Chemical Composition
  3. Mechanical Properties
  4. Physical Properties
  5. Heat Treatment Conditions
  6. Machinability
  7. Weldability
  8. Common Mistakes
  9. When to Choose S48C
  10. FAQ

1. International Equivalent Grades

StandardGradeRegionMatch Type
JIS G4051S48CJapanReference
ASTM / AISI1049USA✅ Nearest Exact
ISO 683-1C50International⚠️ Nearest Equivalent
DINC50 / 1.0540Germany⚠️ Nearest Equivalent
ENC50E / 1.1206Europe⚠️ Nearest Equivalent
AISI 1049 (C: 0.46–0.53%, Mn: 0.60–0.90%) overlaps almost entirely with S48C (C: 0.45–0.51%), making it the closest international equivalent. DIN C50 allows a slightly higher carbon ceiling (up to 0.55%), which can produce marginally higher as-quenched hardness and slightly lower toughness at the upper end. JIS G4051 applies tighter P (≤ 0.030%) and S (≤ 0.035%) limits than both ASTM A29 and DIN EN 10083-2.

2. Chemical Composition

ElementJIS S48CAISI 1049DIN C50
C0.45–0.51%0.46–0.53%0.47–0.55%
Si0.15–0.35%0.10–0.35%≤ 0.40%
Mn0.60–0.90%0.60–0.90%0.50–0.80%
P≤ 0.030%≤ 0.040%≤ 0.045%
S≤ 0.035%≤ 0.050%≤ 0.045%

Sources: JIS G4051:2016, ASTM A29/A29M, DIN EN 10083-2

3. Mechanical Properties

As-normalized

PropertyValue (Metric)Value (Imperial)
Tensile Strength≥ 640 MPa≥ 92.8 ksi
Yield Point≥ 380 MPa≥ 55.1 ksi
Elongation (GL=5d)≥ 14%≥ 14%
Reduction of Area≥ 35%≥ 35%
Hardness179–255 HB179–255 HB

Induction hardening (surface, sections ≤ 30 mm / 1.2 in)

PropertyValue
Surface hardnessHRC 56–62
Effective case depth1.0–3.0 mm (0.039–0.118 in)

After through-hardening + temper (sections ≤ 25 mm / 1 in)

Temper TemperatureTensile StrengthHardness
400°C (752°F)~1000–1100 MPa (145–160 ksi)HRC 36–43
550°C (1022°F)~800–900 MPa (116–130 ksi)HRC 26–34
650°C (1202°F)~650–750 MPa (94–109 ksi)HRC 20–28

4. Physical Properties

PropertyValue (Metric)Value (Imperial)
Density7.85 g/cm³0.284 lb/in³
Young’s Modulus206 GPa29,900 ksi
Thermal Conductivity49 W/(m·K)340 BTU·in/(hr·ft²·°F)
Thermal Expansion (20–100°C / 68–212°F)11.2 × 10⁻⁶ /°C6.2 × 10⁻⁶ /°F
Specific Heat~486 J/(kg·K)0.116 BTU/(lb·°F)

5. Heat Treatment Conditions

ProcessTemperatureCoolingPurpose
Normalizing820–860°C (1508–1580°F)Air coolRefine grain, relieve stress
Annealing800–840°C (1472–1544°F)Furnace coolSoften for machining
Through-Hardening (quench)810–850°C (1490–1562°F)Water or oil quenchFull-section hardening
Tempering400–650°C (752–1202°F)Air coolAdjust strength / toughness balance
Induction Hardening860–930°C surface (1580–1706°F)Water or oil quenchSurface hardening HRC 56–62
⚠ Welding severely restricted S48C’s Ceq of approximately 0.49–0.57 places it in the range where welding is strongly discouraged. Preheat of 125–175°C (257–347°F) is required for any joint, along with low-hydrogen consumables and post-weld stress relief at 550–600°C (1022–1112°F). For applications involving welding, S35C or SM490 are far better choices.

6. Machinability

  • Machinability rating: approximately 50–55% relative to AISI 1212 baseline (100%)
  • Anneal or normalize before rough and finish machining
  • Carbide tooling required for production runs; high-speed steel acceptable for light finishing only
  • Induction-hardened surface finishing requires grinding — no cutting tool approach is viable

7. Weldability

S48C is in the difficult-to-weld category. The elevated carbon content raises HAZ hardening tendency significantly compared to S45C.

  • Preheat: 125–175°C (257–347°F) for all sections over 10 mm (0.4 in); mandatory for restrained joints
  • Process: Low-hydrogen consumables only — E7018 for SMAW, ER70S-6 for GMAW
  • Post-weld: Stress relief at 550–600°C (1022–1112°F) strongly recommended
  • Recommendation: Avoid specifying S48C in welded assemblies. If welding is a design requirement, substitute S35C or a structural grade.

8. Common Mistakes

Mistake 1: Upgrading from S45C to S48C without checking heat treatment first

The hardness gap between S45C and S48C after induction hardening is only 1–3 HRC under typical conditions. Before switching grades, verify that the S45C heat treatment process (austenitizing temperature, quench severity, section size) is properly optimized. In many cases, the apparent shortfall in S45C hardness is a process issue, not a material limitation. Switching to S48C adds cost and restricts weldability without solving the root cause.

Mistake 2: Using S48C in a welded assembly

S48C’s Ceq is high enough that HAZ cold cracking is a serious risk in any restrained joint without rigorous preheat. Engineers who apply S45C welding procedures to S48C without adjustment regularly encounter cracking, especially in cold environments or thick sections. S48C should be treated as a non-weldable grade for practical design purposes.

9. When to Choose S48C

  • ✅ Sprockets, cams, and crankshafts requiring induction surface hardness of HRC 56–62
  • ✅ Sliding surface components where S45C cannot reliably meet a minimum HRC 58 specification
  • ✅ Direct replacement for AISI 1049 in North American-designed parts manufactured in Japan
  • ✅ Machining-only applications with no welding in the production or service workflow
  • ❌ Welded assemblies of any kind — use S35C or SM490
  • ❌ Maximum hardness above HRC 62 — use S55C or a tool steel grade
  • ❌ Large cross-sections requiring deep through-hardness — upgrade to SCM445 or SCM450

10. FAQ

Q: What is the practical difference between S48C and S45C?

Surface hardness after induction hardening: S45C reaches HRC 55–62, S48C reaches HRC 56–62. The overlap is large and in most applications the grades are interchangeable. S48C becomes the justified choice when a minimum hardness guarantee of HRC 58 or higher is needed, and the component will not be welded. The weldability trade-off is real — S48C’s higher Ceq requires more demanding preheat and process control.

Q: Can DIN C50 substitute for S48C?

Close, but not identical. DIN C50 allows carbon up to 0.55%, which is higher than S48C’s 0.51% ceiling. At the upper end of the C50 range, as-quenched hardness will be higher and toughness marginally lower. For most applications the difference is inconsequential. When precision heat treatment response is specified, verify the actual mill carbon value from the material certificate before substituting.

Q: Can S48C reliably achieve HRC 60 or above in induction hardening?

Not guaranteed across all heats. S48C’s carbon range of 0.45–0.51% means that heats at the lower end (0.45–0.47% C) may achieve only HRC 56–58 under standard induction hardening conditions. If HRC 60 minimum is a hard requirement across production lots, S55C is the safer specification — its higher carbon floor makes the target more consistent.

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