JIS S50C is a medium-high carbon steel (0.47–0.53% C) sitting at the upper end of the JIS S-series, one step above the widely used S45C. The additional carbon delivers meaningfully higher surface hardness after induction or flame hardening — typically 3–5 HRC higher than S45C on identical equipment — making it the preferred choice for cam lobes, gear tooth surfaces, slideways, and wear pads. Its international equivalents AISI 1050 (ASTM A29/A29M) and DIN C50 (EN 10083-2) share virtually identical chemistry and behaviour, allowing direct cross-standard substitution in most engineering situations.
- International Equivalent Grades
- Chemical Composition
- Mechanical Properties
- Physical Properties
- Heat Treatment Conditions
- Machinability
- Weldability
- Common Mistakes
- When to Choose S50C
- FAQ
1. International Equivalent Grades
S50C is defined in JIS G4051 (Carbon steels for machine structural use). The table below lists the nearest international equivalents recognised by procurement and design engineers worldwide.
| Standard | Grade | Region | Match Type |
|---|---|---|---|
| JIS G4051 | S50C | Japan | Reference |
| ASTM A29/A29M | AISI 1050 | USA | ✅ Nearest Exact |
| DIN EN 10083-2 | C50 / 1.0540 | Germany / EU | ✅ Nearest Exact |
| EN 10083-2 | C50 / 1.0540 | Europe | ✅ Nearest Exact |
| GB/T 699 | 50 | China | ✅ Nearest Exact |
Sources: JIS G4051:2016, ASTM A29/A29M, DIN EN 10083-2, GB/T 699
For practical engineering purposes, material test data from AISI 1050 or DIN C50 applies directly to S50C. No conversion factors are required when substituting between these grades.
2. Chemical Composition
The carbon ranges of S50C, AISI 1050, and DIN C50 overlap closely. The only notable difference is a fractionally lower minimum phosphorus and sulphur limit in S50C and C50 compared to AISI 1050, which is a minor cleanliness distinction rather than a performance-relevant difference for most applications.
| Element | JIS S50C | AISI 1050 | DIN C50 (1.0540) |
|---|---|---|---|
| C | 0.47–0.53% | 0.48–0.55% | 0.47–0.55% |
| Si | 0.15–0.35% | 0.15–0.35% | 0.15–0.35% |
| Mn | 0.60–0.90% | 0.60–0.90% | 0.60–0.90% |
| P | ≤ 0.030% | ≤ 0.040% | ≤ 0.030% |
| S | ≤ 0.035% | ≤ 0.050% | ≤ 0.035% |
Sources: JIS G4051:2016, ASTM A29/A29M, DIN EN 10083-2
S50C contains no alloy additions (Cr, Mo, Ni). Its hardenability relies entirely on carbon content. This distinguishes it from alloy steels such as SCM440 or SCr440, which achieve deeper and more uniform through-hardening in larger sections.
3. Mechanical Properties
Normalized condition
These are the baseline values for S50C in the normalized state, suitable for components that do not require surface or through hardening.
| Property | Metric | Imperial |
|---|---|---|
| Tensile strength | ≥ 690 MPa | ≥ 100 ksi |
| Yield strength (0.2%) | ≥ 490 MPa | ≥ 71 ksi |
| Elongation | ≥ 17% | ≥ 17% |
| Hardness | 180–235 HB | 180–235 HB |
Quenched and tempered (oil quench + 550°C / 1022°F temper, typical)
Q+T properties vary with section size and temper temperature. Values below are representative for sections up to 50 mm (2.0 in) diameter.
| Property | Metric | Imperial |
|---|---|---|
| Tensile strength | ~750–950 MPa | ~109–138 ksi |
| Yield strength | ~600–800 MPa | ~87–116 ksi |
| Hardness | HRC 22–32 | HRC 22–32 |
Induction hardened surface (section ≤ 25 mm / 1.0 in)
| Property | Metric | Imperial |
|---|---|---|
| Surface hardness | HRC 55–62 | HRC 55–62 |
S50C achieves approximately 3–5 HRC higher surface hardness than S45C after identical induction hardening cycles. This is the primary engineering reason to specify S50C for cam lobes, gear teeth, and wear pads where S45C falls marginally short of the hardness target.
Sources: JIS G4051:2016, ASTM A29/A29M typical data, DIN EN 10083-2 Annex D
4. Physical Properties
| Property | Metric | Imperial |
|---|---|---|
| Density | 7.85 g/cm³ | 0.284 lb/in³ |
| Young’s modulus | 206 GPa | 29,900 ksi |
| Thermal conductivity | 49 W/(m·K) | 339 BTU·in/(hr·ft²·°F) |
| Thermal expansion (20–100°C / 68–212°F) | 11.5 × 10⁻⁶ /°C | 6.4 × 10⁻⁶ /°F |
| Specific heat | ~486 J/(kg·K) | 0.116 BTU/(lb·°F) |
Physical properties are essentially identical to S45C, as the small carbon difference does not measurably alter density, modulus, or thermal behaviour in structural calculations.
5. Heat Treatment Conditions
S50C responds to all standard carbon steel heat treatment processes. The slightly higher carbon content narrows the safe induction hardening window compared to S45C — a critical process control point.
| Process | Temperature | Cooling | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|
| Normalizing | 820–870°C (1508–1598°F) | Air cool | Grain refinement, stress relief |
| Annealing | 800–850°C (1472–1562°F) | Furnace cool | Softening for machining |
| Quenching | 810–860°C (1490–1580°F) | Oil (preferred) or water | Martensite transformation |
| Tempering | 400–650°C (752–1202°F) | Air cool | Final strength/toughness balance |
| Induction hardening | 850–920°C (1562–1688°F) surface | Water or oil quench | Surface wear resistance HRC 55–62 |
Water quenching is technically possible but significantly increases distortion and cracking risk compared to oil quench for S50C, particularly in complex geometries or sections with abrupt cross-section changes. Specify oil quench wherever part geometry permits. Request water quench only when oil-quench hardenability is demonstrated to be insufficient through jominy or production data.
Do not exceed 920°C (1688°F) during induction heating of S50C. Above this temperature, austenite grain coarsening accelerates, leading to a coarser as-quenched martensite, lower toughness, and an increased risk of micro-cracking at the quench. S50C’s narrower safe window (compared to S45C) requires tighter power density and dwell time control — recalibrate whenever switching an induction line from S45C to S50C.
6. Machinability
S50C machinability is approximately 55–60% relative to AISI 1212 (free-machining baseline). The higher carbon content compared to S45C makes S50C marginally harder to cut in the normalized condition, with a tendency toward built-up edge on HSS tooling at production cutting speeds.
Recommended practices
- Machine in normalized or annealed condition before heat treatment — never attempt to finish-machine after induction hardening except by grinding.
- Use carbide tooling (P20–P30 grade) for production turning and milling. HSS is acceptable only for low-speed, small-batch operations.
- Cutting speed: approximately 80–120 m/min (262–394 ft/min) with carbide tooling and flood coolant in normalized condition.
- Drill and tap all holes to finished dimensions before heat treatment. Tapping after induction hardening is not feasible without EDM or specialized carbide taps.
7. Weldability
S50C weldability is classified as restricted. The carbon equivalent (Ceq = C + Mn/6 + (Cr+Mo+V)/5 + (Ni+Cu)/15) for S50C is approximately 0.60–0.70, placing it in a zone where cold cracking in the heat-affected zone (HAZ) is a genuine risk without proper preheat control.
| Section thickness | Preheat | Post-weld treatment |
|---|---|---|
| t ≤ 12 mm (0.5 in) | 100–150°C (212–302°F) recommended | Stress relief at 600–650°C (1112–1202°F) recommended |
| t > 12 mm (0.5 in) | 150–200°C (302–392°F) mandatory | Post-weld stress relief strongly required |
For designs requiring significant welding, S35C or S40C are preferred alternatives with substantially lower Ceq and far lower HAZ cracking risk.
8. Common Mistakes
S50C’s Ceq is approximately 0.12–0.15 higher than S45C. Engineers familiar with S45C sometimes apply identical preheat protocols (or skip preheat entirely) when switching to S50C, resulting in cold cracks in the HAZ of thicker sections. Any S50C weld on sections thicker than 12 mm (0.5 in) requires documented preheat — even in warm workshop conditions where ambient temperature reduces the perceived risk. The risk is not hypothetical: HAZ cold cracking in S50C has been a documented failure mode in welded jig and fixture fabrication where the designer simply upgraded material grade without revising the welding procedure.
S50C has a narrower safe austenitizing window for induction hardening. Over-heating S50C above approximately 920°C (1688°F) during induction results in austenite grain coarsening and an elevated risk of micro-cracking at the quench front. Because the visual appearance of the process looks identical to an S45C cycle, operators sometimes assume the same power density and dwell time are safe — they are not. When switching an induction hardening line from S45C to S50C, recalibrate power density and dwell time using thermocouple or pyrometer feedback before committing production parts. Do not rely on the prior S45C process recipe.
9. When to Choose S50C
- ✅ Cam lobes, camshafts, and followers where HRC 58–62 surface hardness is the design target
- ✅ Gear blanks and spline shafts requiring harder induction-hardened surfaces than S45C provides
- ✅ Machine tool slideways and wear pads with induction or flame hardening
- ✅ Applications where AISI 1050 or DIN C50 is the applicable design standard
- ✅ Die blocks and stamping tooling in light-to-medium duty service
- ❌ Welded assemblies — specify S35C or S40C instead
- ❌ Large sections (> 50 mm / 2.0 in) requiring full through-hardening — specify SCM440
- ❌ Spring applications — specify SUP9 (chromium-added, superior fatigue life)
- ❌ Heavy dies with high impact loading — specify SKD11 or equivalent tool steel
10. FAQ
What is the difference between S45C and S50C?
Carbon content is the defining difference: S45C contains 0.42–0.48% C versus S50C’s 0.47–0.53% C. Under identical heat treatment conditions, S50C achieves approximately 3–5 HRC higher surface hardness after induction hardening, and slightly higher tensile strength after quench and temper. The trade-offs are lower toughness, poorer weldability (higher Ceq), and greater distortion risk on water quench. S50C should be chosen only when the higher hardness is specifically required for the wear or fatigue life calculation — for general-purpose mechanical components not constrained by surface hardness, S45C remains the preferred choice due to its better balance of properties and machinability.
Can S50C be flame-hardened?
Yes. Flame hardening is a common surface treatment for S50C slideways, guide rails, and large cam profiles where section size or complex geometry makes induction coil design impractical. Target surface temperature during flame heating: 850–900°C (1562–1652°F), verified by contact pyrometer or thermal crayon. Quench immediately with water mist or oil spray. Achievable surface hardness: HRC 52–60, depending on flame intensity, traverse speed, and quench rate. Temper at 150–180°C (302–356°F) promptly after quenching to reduce residual stress and risk of delayed cracking.
Is AISI 1050 the same as S50C?
Very close — for practical engineering purposes, they are interchangeable. The carbon ranges overlap: JIS S50C (0.47–0.53% C) vs AISI 1050 (0.48–0.55% C). The S50C lower bound is fractionally lower than 1050. Manganese and silicon ranges are identical. Material test data from AISI 1050 mill certificates applies directly to S50C without conversion. When sourcing from the US market to a JIS-specified design (or vice versa), no grade conversion is required — verify the mill certificate chemistry falls within the applicable standard’s range.
How does S50C compare to S55C?
S55C (0.52–0.58% C) continues the carbon-increment trend beyond S50C. S55C achieves marginally higher hardness after quenching but is even less weldable (Ceq ≈ 0.65–0.75) and more prone to quench cracking. S55C is used for flat springs, snap rings, and components where very high hardness after minimal heat treatment is needed. For most cam and gear applications, S50C provides the correct balance — S55C is used only when S50C’s maximum achievable hardness has been shown to be insufficient.


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