SNC815 Steel: Equivalent Grades, Properties & Heat Treatment Guide

steel

SNC815 (JIS G4102) is Japan’s high-nickel carburizing steel, engineered for large-section heavy-duty gears and shafts where lighter Ni-Cr grades fall short. With Ni at 3.00–3.50%, it delivers deep hardenability up to 80 mm (3.1 in) sections and core Charpy impact exceeding 127 J — without molybdenum.

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 SNC815
  10. FAQ

1. International Equivalent Grades

Standard Grade Region Match Type
JIS G4102 SNC815 Japan Reference
ASTM A29/A29M AISI 3310 USA ⚠️ Nearest Equivalent — different Cr range (1.40–1.75% vs SNC815’s 0.60–1.00%)
DIN EN 10084 14NiCr14 / 1.5762 Germany / EU ✅ Nearest Exact
EN 10084 14NiCr14 / 1.5762 Europe ✅ Nearest Exact
Critical substitution note: AISI 3310 has substantially higher Cr (1.40–1.75%) compared to SNC815 (0.60–1.00%). This difference changes the austenitizing temperature response and quench hardenability behavior. Direct substitution requires verifying the quench temperature and austenitizing time with the heat treater. DIN/EN 14NiCr14 (1.5762) is a true match in both Ni (3.00–3.50%) and Cr (0.70–1.00%) ranges.

2. Chemical Composition

Element JIS SNC815 AISI 3310 DIN 14NiCr14
C0.12–0.18%0.08–0.13%0.10–0.17%
Si0.15–0.35%0.15–0.35%≤ 0.40%
Mn0.35–0.65%0.45–0.60%0.40–0.70%
P≤ 0.030%≤ 0.035%≤ 0.025%
S≤ 0.030%≤ 0.040%≤ 0.035%
Ni3.00–3.50%3.25–3.75%3.00–3.50%
Cr0.60–1.00%1.40–1.75%0.70–1.00%

Sources: JIS G4102:2016, ASTM A29/A29M, DIN EN 10084

3. Mechanical Properties

Core Properties — After Carburizing + Quench + Low Temper (Section ≤ 50 mm / 2.0 in)

Property Metric Imperial
Core tensile strength980–1180 MPa142–171 ksi
Core yield strength≥ 785 MPa≥ 113.8 ksi
Core elongation≥ 13%≥ 13%
Core Charpy impact≥ 127 J≥ 94 ft·lbf
Core hardnessHRC 32–42HRC 32–42

Case Properties

Property Value
Surface hardnessHRC 58–64
Effective case depth0.8–3.0 mm (0.031–0.118 in)
SNC815 vs SNC415 — core impact comparison: SNC815 achieves core Charpy ≥ 127 J versus SNC415’s ≥ 88 J. The extra 0.50–1.00% Ni in SNC815 accounts for this ~44% improvement in impact energy, which is critical for shock-loaded gears in mining, steel mill drives, and marine propulsion.

4. Physical Properties

Property Metric Imperial
Density7.85 g/cm³0.284 lb/in³
Young’s modulus205 GPa29,700 ksi
Thermal conductivity37 W/(m·K)257 BTU·in/(hr·ft²·°F)
Thermal expansion (20–100°C)11.4 × 10⁻⁶ /°C6.3 × 10⁻⁶ /°F
Specific heat~477 J/(kg·K)0.114 BTU/(lb·°F)

5. Heat Treatment Conditions

Process Temperature Cooling Purpose
Normalizing850–900°C (1562–1652°F)Air coolRefine grain; prepare for carburizing
Carburizing900–950°C (1652–1742°F)Oil quenchCarbon enrichment of case to 0.7–0.9% C
Case hardening quench800–830°C (1472–1526°F)Oil quenchAustenitize and harden case; preserve core toughness
Low tempering150–180°C (302–356°F)Air coolRelieve quench stress; maintain HRC 58–64 at surface

6. Machinability

  • Machinability approximately 55% relative to AISI 1212 — lower than SNC415 due to higher Ni content.
  • Very high Ni increases work hardening rate; dull tools will worsen surface quality rapidly.
  • Sharp tooling and moderate cutting speeds (60–90 m/min / 200–295 ft/min) with coated carbide inserts required.
  • Anneal before rough machining (at 820–850°C / 1508–1562°F, furnace cool) to reduce hardness to HB 170–210 for best machinability.
  • All critical dimensions and features should be completed before carburizing; post-case grinding is the only practical finishing method.

7. Weldability

  • Rating: Very restricted — not suitable for welded assemblies.
  • High Ni + Cr combination creates severe HAZ cracking risk during cooling after welding.
  • Carbon equivalent (Ceq) exceeds 0.60, making preheat alone insufficient to prevent delayed cracking.
  • In practice, SNC815 components are not designed for welded joints. If a repair weld is unavoidable, consult a metallurgist for procedure qualification.
  • Welding is absolutely prohibited after carburizing — the hardened case will crack under thermal stress.

8. Common Mistakes

Mistake 1: Over-Specifying SNC815 for Small Gears

For sections below 25 mm (1.0 in), SNC415 or SNCM220 achieves the same case hardness (HRC 58–64) and adequate core properties at meaningfully lower material cost. SNC815’s hardenability advantage — its justification for existence — only becomes relevant at sections above 40 mm (1.6 in). Using SNC815 for module 3–5 gears in light industrial machinery is an unnecessary cost premium. Evaluate section size first, then select the minimum-cost grade that meets the hardenability requirement.

Mistake 2: Expecting AISI 3310 to Behave Identically to SNC815

AISI 3310 has significantly higher Cr (1.40–1.75%) versus SNC815 (0.60–1.00%). Higher Cr raises the Ac1 and Ac3 transformation temperatures, requiring different austenitizing conditions for equivalent case hardness. Engineers who directly substitute 3310 for SNC815 and use SNC815’s nominal 800–830°C (1472–1526°F) case hardening temperature may achieve incomplete austenitizing and softer case than expected. Always verify the quench temperature with the heat treater when changing grade specifications.

9. When to Choose SNC815

✅ Choose SNC815 when:

  • ✅ Large-module gears (module ≥ 8) in mining, steel mill, and marine applications
  • ✅ Heavy pinions and ring gears where section exceeds 50 mm (2.0 in)
  • ✅ Applications requiring core Charpy impact above 120 J for shock and impact resistance
  • ✅ When DIN 14NiCr14 (1.5762) is the specified European equivalent for import substitution
  • ✅ Propulsion shafts and large planet gears in marine and wind turbine gearboxes

❌ Avoid SNC815 when:

  • ❌ Small or medium gears with section below 40 mm (1.6 in) — use SNC415 or SNCM220 at lower cost
  • ❌ Through-hardening applications — use SNCM625 or SNCM447
  • ❌ Welded assemblies — high Ni + Cr makes welding impractical

10. FAQ

Q: What is the practical difference between SNC815 and SNCM415?

Both are high-Ni carburizing steels used for large-section gears, but they achieve hardenability by different mechanisms. SNC815 relies on high Ni (3.00–3.50%) without Mo; SNCM415 uses lower Ni (1.60–2.00%) combined with Mo (0.15–0.30%). For sections ≤ 50 mm (2.0 in), SNCM415 often performs comparably with better cost control, as Mo is very efficient at suppressing bainite during quench. For sections above 60 mm (2.4 in), SNC815’s higher Ni can provide better deep hardenability in oil quench. In practice, SNCM415 is more commonly specified for its balanced cost-to-hardenability ratio.

Q: Is DIN 14NiCr14 widely available?

Yes. 14NiCr14 (material number 1.5762) is a standard EN carburizing grade documented in DIN EN 10084 and available from European specialty steel mills in Germany, Sweden, and the UK. It is widely specified for heavy industrial gearing in the automotive supply chain and for mining and cement plant applications. Stock availability in bar form (25–200 mm diameter) is generally good from distributors serving these markets.

Q: How does SNC815 compare to SNCM625 for very large sections?

SNCM625 adds Mo (0.25–0.40%) to a Ni-Cr base, giving it superior hardenability for sections exceeding 100 mm (3.9 in). SNC815 is suitable for sections up to approximately 80 mm (3.1 in) with oil quench and achieves consistent core hardness in that range. For the largest sections — such as bull gears and large mill pinions above 100 mm (3.9 in) — SNCM625 with its Mo content is preferred because the oil quench rate at the core of very large sections is too slow for SNC815’s hardenability. If in doubt, calculate the ideal critical diameter (DI) and compare to the actual quenched section.

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