CPM-M2, CPM-M4 and CPM-3V Compared and Explanation for Chipping of High Carbon Steels

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Zac
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CPM-M2, CPM-M4 and CPM-3V Compared and Explanation for Chipping of High Carbon Steels

#1

Post by Zac »

CPM-3V has a wear resistance similar to CPM-S30V but slightly better. It has become popular quickly for fixed blades because of the impact toughness and corrosion resistance. Here is some more info comparing M4 and M2 to 3V...the point is the amazing steel for a sprint run when it pertains to cutlery is without a doubt CPM-3V as it sports an impact toughness that only shock-proof steels can touch; and can have a hardness up to 62 HRC while maintaining impact toughness than no other cutlery steel comes close to. Smaller knife makers like this steel; and the following tests show how good 3V is as it outperforms M2 and M4 in every single case test.

CPM-M4 compared to 3V in the top punch (impact toughness)

CPM-M2, M4 and 3V in the an anvil die

CPM-M2 versus CPM-3V for piercing punches (impact toughness and blade retention)







Additionally, many people wonder why S30V can chip. S30V is a very high carbon steel. If S30V is made and hardened through conventional processes, the steel can crack and chip. In S30V, the hardening process is critical to the quality of the steel. Let's look at what Crucible provides to explain why some steels can become brittle although their properties may not indicate brittleness. As a start, CPM stands for Crucible Particle Metallurgy. For those with some knowledge of metal working, Crucible's process differs dramatically from ingot casted metals.

Conventional Steelmaking vs.Particle Metallurgy Processing

Conventional steelmaking begins by melting the steel in a large electric arc furnace. It is usually followed by a secondary refining process such as Argon Oxygen Decarburization (AOD). After refining, the molten metal is poured from the furnace into a ladle, and then teemed into ingot molds.

Although the steel is very homogeneous in the molten state, as it slowly solidifies in the molds, the alloying elements segregate resulting in a non-uniform as-cast microstructure. In high speed steels and high carbon tool steels, carbides precipitate from the melt and grow to form a coarse intergranular network. Subsequent mill processing is required to break up and refine the microstructure, but the segregation effects are never fully eliminated. The higher the alloy content and the higher the carbon content, the more detrimental are the effects of the segregation on the resultant mechanical properties of the finished steel product.

The CPM process also begins with a homogeneous molten bath similar to conventional melting. Instead of being teemed into ingot molds, the molten metal is poured through a small nozzle where high pressure gas bursts the liquid stream into a spray of tiny spherical droplets. These rapidly solidify and collect as powder particles in the bottom of the atomization tower. The powder is relatively spherical in shape and uniform in composition as each particle is essentially a micro-ingot which has solidified so rapidly that segregation has been suppressed. The carbides which precipitate during solidification are extremely fine due to the rapid cooling and the small size of the powder particles. The fine carbide size of CPM steel endures throughout mill processing and remains fine in the finished bar.

The powder is screened and loaded into steel containers which are then evacuated and sealed. The sealed containers are hot isostatically pressed (HIP) at temperatures approximately the same as those used for forging. The extremely high pressure used in HIP consolidates the powder by bonding the individual particles into a fully dense compact. The resultant microstructure is homogeneous and fine grained and, in the high carbon grades, exhibits a uniform distribution of tiny carbides. Although CPM steels can be used in the as-HIP condition, the compacts normally undergo the same standard mill processing used for conventionally melted ingots, resulting in improved toughness.

CPM Eliminates Segregation

Conventionally produced high alloy steels are prone to alloy segregation during solidification. Regardless of the amount of subsequent mill processing, non-uniform clusters of carbides persist as remnants of the as-cast microstructure. This alloy segregation can detrimentally affect tool fabrication and performance.

CPM steels are HIP consolidated from tiny powder particles, each having uniform composition and a uniform distribution of fine carbides. Because there is no alloy segregation in the powder particles themselves, there is no alloy segregation in the resultant compact. The uniform distribution of fine carbides also prevents grain growth, so that the resultant microstructure is fine grained.
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SoCal Operator
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#2

Post by SoCal Operator »

Good to know.There's been a lot of people wanting M-4 as a sprint run steel, but I've never seen it objectively compared. I believe the Schempp camp knife will be offered in 3V, so this info only raises my anticipation of that particular knife.
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butch
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#3

Post by butch »

have i ever told you all how much i love 3v :D
things to keep in mind the window for heat treat and tempering is small
thats why you dont see using it in big batches in a kiln you can have 25f temp differences in the same kiln on the same batch and look at how tight the tempering can be off by 25F on 3v can drop it a point in RC
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