Free-machining steel
Free-machining steel is steel that forms small chips when machined. This increases the material's machinability by breaking the chips into small pieces, thus avoiding entanglement in the machinery. This enables automatic equipment to run without human interaction. Free-machining steel with lead also allows for higher machining rates. Free-machining steel costs 15 to 20% more than standard steel, but increased machining speeds, larger cuts, and longer tool life offset the higher cost.
The disadvantages of free-machining steel are: ductility is decreased, impact resistance is reduced, copper-based brazed joints suffer from embrittlement with bismuth free-machining grades, and shrink fits are not as strong.
Types
There are four main types of free-machining steel: leaded, resulfurized, rephosphorized, and super. Super-free-machining steels are alloyed with tellurium, selenium, and bismuth.| Type | SAE designation |
| Leaded | 12L13 |
| Leaded | 12L14 |
| Rephosphorized and resulfurized | 1211 |
| Rephosphorized and resulfurized | 1212 |
| Rephosphorized and resulfurized | 1213 |
| Resulfurized | 1117 |
| Resulfurized | 1118 |
| Resulfurized | 1119 |