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304 Stainless Steel Sheet, Unpolished
304 Stainless Steel Sheet, Unpolished

304 Stainless Steel Sheet, Unpolished (Mill) Finish, Annealed/Hot Rolled, ASTM A240/ASME SA240, 0.1875" Thickness, 12" Width, 36" Length, OnlineMetals

Product ID : 12154410


Galleon Product ID 12154410
Shipping Weight 22.82 lbs
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Model 6462
Manufacturer OnlineMetals
Shipping Dimension 35.98 x 12.01 x 0.2 inches
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304 Stainless Steel Sheet, Unpolished Features

  • 304 stainless steel, the most common stainless steel alloy, provides high strength and good corrosion resistance.

  • 0.1875" Thickness, 12" Width, 36" Length

  • Annealed

  • Stainless 304/304L is typically used in aerospace, food and beverage industry, pressure containers, architectural designs and trim, cryogenic applications, and chemical processing equipment.

  • Meets ASTM-A240, ASME-SA-240


About 304 Stainless Steel Sheet, Unpolished

The 304 stainless steel sheet has an unpolished (mill) surface, has been annealed, meets American Society for Testing and Materials International ASTM A240 and American Society of Mechanical Engineers ASME SA240 specifications, and has a standard tolerance. The 304 stainless steel grade is a general-purpose material that combines corrosion resistance, weldability, and formability, making it the most commonly used grade of stainless steel. An austenitic stainless steel that is one of the 18-8 grades, 304 can be cold worked to increase its hardness and strength while maintaining most of its formability. The material is typically nonmagentic but may become slightly magnetic when cold worked. The material has been annealed, a method of heating and cooling metal to modify its properties, such as increasing its formability and toughness or decreasing its strength, after it has been shaped.Stainless steel is an iron alloy with resistance to staining and rusting in many environments where steel would typically degrade. The chemical composition of each grade creates a grain structure that falls into one of five classes: austenitic, duplex, ferritic, martensitic, and precipitation hardening. The austenitic class contains the most formable, weldable, and corrosion-resistant stainless steel grades, but they cannot be heat treated. The duplex class offers high resistance to pitting and chloride stress corrosion cracking. Duplex grades are heat treatable and roughly twice as strong as austenitic grades. The ferritic class contains moderately formable and corrosion-resistant grades compared to other stainless steel classes, but they cannot be heat treated. The martensitic class includes some of the hardest and strongest stainless steel grades that also offer mild corrosion resistance, high hardness, and good formability. Martensitic grades can be heat treated. The precipitation-hardening (PH) class can be heat treated after fabrication to achieve some