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JLY Precision Technology

Paslanmaz Çelik CNC İşleme: 2026 Rehberi (303, 304, 316L, 17-4PH)

Paslanmaz çelik CNC işleme mühendis rehberi: 303 vs 304 vs 316L vs 17-4PH, gıda/tıbbi/deniz dereceleri, işlenebilirlik, pasifleştirme.

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Precision-machined 316L stainless steel components on quality inspection bench

Korozyon, sterilizasyon, gıda teması veya sürdürülebilir mukavemet önemli olduğunda paslanmaz çelik cevaptır — ancak iyi işlenmesi en zor malzemelerden biridir. Bu rehber JLYPT'nin günlük olarak işlediği dereceleri kapsar.

Why and when to choose stainless steel

Stainless steel earns its name from chromium (≥10.5%) forming a self-healing chromium-oxide passive layer that resists rust. Beyond corrosion resistance, the family offers:

  • Strength — most grades yield at 200–500 MPa, with PH grades reaching 1100+ MPa.
  • Hygiene — non-porous, easy to clean, autoclavable. Standard for food, medical, pharma.
  • Heat tolerance — useful service to 400–800°C depending on grade.
  • Aesthetic durability — keeps appearance for decades without coating.
  • Recyclable — 100% recyclable, scrap value supports lifecycle costs.

Grade comparison — pick the right family

Austenitic (300 series)

  • Most common stainless family.
  • Non-magnetic (mostly), excellent corrosion.
  • Includes 303, 304, 316, 316L, 321.
  • Good weldability and formability.
  • Cannot be hardened by heat treatment.

Precipitation Hardening (PH)

  • Heat-treatable for high strength + corrosion resistance.
  • Includes 17-4PH, 15-5PH, 13-8Mo.
  • Yields 1100+ MPa after H900 treatment.
  • Used in aerospace, pumps, downhole tools.
  • More expensive than 300 series.
Cost relative to 303 free-machining stainless. Machinability rating: 1=hardest, 5=easiest.
GradeYield (MPa)CorrosionMachinabilityBest forCost
303240GoodExcellent (free-machining)Shafts, fasteners, valve parts1.0×
304215ExcellentModerateGeneral food, marine, industrial1.05×
316L170SuperiorModerateMedical implants, marine, chemical1.3×
321205ExcellentModerateHeat exchangers, exhaust (high temp)1.4×
17-4PH (H900)1170GoodDifficult (4-rated)Aerospace pumps, oil & gas1.7×
15-5PH1170GoodDifficultSimilar to 17-4 with better transverse1.8×
2205 duplex450SuperiorVery difficultChemical & offshore, chloride env.2.0×
440C (martensitic)690ModerateDifficultBearings, knives, hardened tools1.4×
316L stainless steel CNC parts after passivation
Production 316L parts ready for medical / marine deployment — the most-quoted stainless grade at JLYPT.

Machinability differences (this is where stainless gets tricky)

Unlike aluminium, stainless steel work-hardens during cutting — meaning a dull tool leaves the surface harder than the bulk material, making the next cut even harder. This drives several rules:

  • Sharp tools always. Worn tools cause work hardening and surface damage. Replace at half the wear interval used for steel.
  • Constant chip load. Stop-start motion (intermittent cutting) work-hardens the surface. Use trochoidal toolpaths for pockets.
  • Slower than aluminium, faster than titanium. Surface speed: 60–90 m/min vs aluminium 300+ m/min vs titanium 30 m/min.
  • Aggressive coolant. Heat builds fast in the cutting zone. Flood coolant minimum, high-pressure ideal.
  • Carbide tooling preferred. HSS works for low-volume, but carbide lasts longer and cuts cleaner.
  • 303 is dramatically easier than 304. The added sulphur in 303 acts as a chip-breaker and lubricant — but at the cost of corrosion resistance.

Achievable tolerances on stainless

Slightly looser than aluminium because stainless springs back during cutting and requires multiple finishing passes for tight tolerances.
FeatureStandard CNCPrecision CNCHigh-end (with care)
External dimensions±0.10 mm±0.025 mm±0.010 mm
Hole diameter (drilled)±0.05 mm±0.013 mm±0.005 mm
Hole diameter (reamed)±0.013 mm±0.005 mm±0.0025 mm
Surface finish (Ra)1.6 µm0.8 µm0.4 µm
Flatness (over 100 mm)0.05 mm0.020 mm0.010 mm

For ±0.005 mm or tighter on stainless — typically aerospace pumps, medical implants — JLYPT uses dedicated 5-axis cells with thermal compensation and CMM verification. See our tolerances and GD&T guide.

Passivation and finishes (don't skip passivation)

CNC machining exposes free iron from the underlying material. This iron will rust in saline or moist environments, even on "stainless" parts. Passivation removes this iron and restores the chromium-oxide passive layer.

  1. Degrease

    Remove cutting fluid, oils and machining residues with appropriate cleaning chemistry.

  2. Citric or nitric acid bath

    Citric acid (gentler, environmentally friendly) or nitric acid (aggressive, faster) — typically 30–60 minutes per ASTM A967 or AMS 2700.

  3. Rinse and neutralise

    Multiple deionised-water rinses to remove all acid residue.

  4. Dry and inspect

    Visual inspection + optional copper sulphate test to confirm passive layer is present.

  5. Document

    Issue passivation certificate referencing ASTM/AMS standard for traceability.

Common stainless finishes

  • Bead blasted — uniform matte; hides tool marks.
  • Brushed (#3, #4) — directional grain, appliance look.
  • Mirror polished (#8) — Ra ≤ 0.05 µm, sanitary applications.
  • Electropolished — bright + smooth + corrosion-improved.
  • PVD coated — TiN (gold), DLC (black) for wear/cosmetic.

Always passivate when

  • Part will see saline, chlorides or chemicals.
  • Medical or food-contact applications.
  • Welded assemblies (welding contaminates with iron).
  • After heat treatment of PH grades.
  • Outdoor architectural or marine use.

Industry applications by grade

  • 304 — kitchen equipment, brewery tanks, automotive trim, indoor industrial. The default "good stainless".
  • 316L — surgical instruments, marine fittings, chemical processing, swimming pool components, off-shore. The default "premium stainless".
  • 303 — non-critical machined parts: shafts, custom fasteners, valve internals where slight corrosion compromise is OK.
  • 17-4PH — aerospace pump shafts, downhole oil tools, high-strength fasteners. See oil & gas components.
  • 440C — bearings, ball valves, knife blades, hardened wear surfaces.
  • 2205 duplex — chemical processing, offshore platforms, desalination — anywhere stainless commonly fails to chloride pitting.
  • 321 — exhaust manifolds, heat exchangers, jet engine hot-section parts.
Surgical instruments in 316L stainless steel after electropolishing
Medical-grade 316L with electropolished surfaces — the standard for instruments contacting tissue or blood.

Real cost ranges

Indicative pricing for a typical 50×50×25 mm stainless bracket, passivated, batch quantities:

Indicative only — real quotes depend on geometry, tolerances, finish complexity, and certification requirements.
Quantity303 unit cost304 unit cost316L unit cost17-4PH unit cost
1 (prototype)$110$135$165$210
10$32$40$48$70
100$13$17$22$32
1000$7.20$9.50$13$20

Stainless parts are typically 2–3× the cost of equivalent aluminium parts because: material is more expensive (×3), machining is slower (×2), and inspection takes longer (×1.5). For 100+ unit batches the gap narrows but stainless never matches aluminium on price.

Design tips for stainless parts

  1. Use 303 when corrosion isn't critical. Saves 20–30% in machining time over 304.
  2. Don't mix grades in one assembly. Galvanic corrosion at the interface; use the same grade throughout, or insulate.
  3. Specify passivation on the drawing. "Passivate per ASTM A967" — tells the shop to include it and certify.
  4. Avoid sharp internal corners. 1 mm minimum radius reduces stress concentration and tool breakage.
  5. Allow extra material for stress relief. For PH grades, plan rough → heat treat → finish; aging shifts dimensions slightly.
  6. Use larger thread engagements. Stainless galls easily; spec full thread depth + anti-seize for assembly.
  7. Specify surface finish where it matters. Default Ra 1.6 µm is fine for most. Demand Ra 0.4 only on sealing/sliding surfaces.
  8. Mark food/medical parts for traceability — alloy + lot number etched per regulations.

Sıkça Sorulan Sorular

304 ile 316L arasındaki fark nedir?
316L %2-3 molibden ekler, klorür çukurlaşma korozyonuna karşı direnci dramatik olarak artırır. ~%25 daha pahalıdır.
Pasifleştirme neden önemli?
CNC işleme malzemenin yüzeyine serbest demir açığa çıkarır. Pasifleştirme olmadan, "paslanmaz" parçalarda bile bu demir paslanır.
Paslanmaz çelik sertleştirilebilir mi?
300 serisi östenit dereceler ısıl işlemle sertleştirilemez. Martenzitik (440C) ve PH (17-4PH) dereceler sertleştirilebilir.
Paslanmaz çelik manyetik mi?
300 serisi esasen manyetik değil. 400 serisi güçlü manyetik. MRI odaları için 316L belirtin.
En ucuz paslanmaz derecesi?
303 serbest işlemli paslanmaz — kükürt ilavesi nedeniyle 304'ten %30-50 daha hızlı işlenir.
JLYPT 17-4PH işleyebilir mi?
Evet, H900 koşulu dahil. Malzeme sertifikaları (MTR) ve tam izlenebilirlik standart.
Elektroparlatma sunuyor musunuz?
Evet — ISO 13485 tıbbi iş için standart. Daha pürüzsüz yüzey (~Ra 0.1 µm), daha iyi korozyon direnci.
Tıbbi implantlar için paslanmaz vs titanyum?
316L cerrahi aletler ve kısa süreli implantlar için uygundur. Uzun süreli implantlar tipik olarak Ti-6Al-4V ELI kullanır.

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Senior CNC Application Engineers

Our application engineering team brings 15+ years of combined experience producing precision components for aerospace, medical, robotics and industrial automation customers.

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