ASTM A48 vs EN-GJL: Gray Iron Grades — Quick Guide

A quick, practical grade map for gray/grey iron: ASTM A48 vs EN-GJL grades, indicative properties, machinability, and where each grade is used—plus casting/design notes and an RFQ checklist.

Executive summary (what to choose & when)

  • Lower classes/grades (A48 20–30 / EN-GJL-150–250)best damping & machinability, lower strength.
  • Mid (A48 35–50 / EN-GJL-250–350)balanced for housings, machine bases, pump/valve bodies.
  • High (A48 60 / EN-GJL-400)highest strength, less damping, and machinability drops.
  • Section size, cooling rate, and pearlite content drive the real properties—sample to lock the window.

Grade cross-reference (indicative)

EN 1561 names EN-GJL-xxx by min tensile MPa on a standard test bar. ASTM A48 uses “Class xx” by min tensile ksi. The mapping below is the nearest typical, not one-to-one.

ASTM A48 class (min UTS)Nearest EN-GJLIndicative UTS (MPa)Typical HBWMatrix trendTypical uses
20 (20 ksi)EN-GJL-150140–170120–170Ferritic-leaningCovers, gearboxes, vibration bases
25 (25 ksi)EN-GJL-200170–210150–190Ferrite + pearlitePump/valve bodies, compressor shells
30 (30 ksi)EN-GJL-200/250200–260170–210More pearliteEngine blocks, machine beds
35 (35 ksi)EN-GJL-250240–300180–220PearliticHousings, flanges, brackets
40 (40 ksi)EN-GJL-250/300270–320190–240Pearlitic↑Brake drums, pulleys
45 (45 ksi)EN-GJL-300300–340200–250Pearlitic↑Hydraulic bodies, gears (as-cast)
50 (50 ksi)EN-GJL-350330–370210–260Pearlitic-highHigh-load housings, rolls (machined)
60 (60 ksi)EN-GJL-400380–420240–300Pearlitic-highestThinner sections with higher stress

Values are typical production windows for guidance only; verify on your section size and cooling conditions.

Design notes (castability, damping, machinability)

  • Damping: gray iron’s graphite flakes give superior damping—lower grades damp best.
  • Machinability: improves with ferrite; declines as pearlite/HB rise. Carbide-tipped or CBN for high-HB parts.
  • Wall thickness: in green sand, ~4–8 mm (0.16–0.31 in) practical minimum depending on envelope/cores; keep uniform walls and add radii.
  • Leak-tightness: gray iron is porosity-sensitive in thin sections—pressure parts may need impregnation or choose ductile iron.
  • Tolerances & finish (indicative): ISO 8062-3 ~ CT8–CT10 (size-dependent); Ra 6.3–12.5 μm (250–500 μin) after shot-blast.

Selecting by application (what the market really uses)

  • Machine bases/beds/frames: EN-GJL-200/250 (A48 30–35) for damping + machinability.
  • Pump/valve bodies: EN-GJL-250/300 (A48 35–40) when pressure is moderate; check leak tests.
  • Brake drums/pulleys: EN-GJL-300 (A48 45) for wear & thermal stability.
  • Engine blocks/compressor housings: EN-GJL-200/250; local higher HB acceptable.
  • Thinner high-stress housings: EN-GJL-350/400 (A48 50–60) if you can trade damping for strength.

Chemistry & structure (why grades behave differently)

  • Higher strength comes from higher pearlite, finer graphite, adequate Mn/Cu, but HB ↑, machinability ↓, and damping ↓.
  • Manage phosphorus (P) and sulfur (S) to avoid steadite/fulgurite and brittleness; typical targets P ≤0.08%, S ≤0.12% (program-dependent).
  • Fast-cooling thin walls act as “higher grade” than test bars—don’t over-spec.

YB Metal production snapshot

From recent gray-iron programs:

  • Chemistry windows (indicative): C 3.0–3.4%, Si 1.8–2.4%, Mn 0.5–0.9%, P ≤0.08%, S ≤0.12% (grade-dependent).
  • Sand KPIs: AFS GFN 55–65, moisture 2.8–3.2%, LOI 3.0–3.8%; shot-blast to Ra 6.3–12.5 μm.
  • Dimensional capability: green sand CT8–CT10 (ISO 8062-3), envelope-dependent.
  • Verification: Brinell per batch; tensile coupons by heat; FAI + CMM/3D scan on criticals; optional pressure/leak and NDT.

Cost & risk signals (why a grade quote moves)

DriverEffect
Step-up grade (e.g., 250→300)More pearlite/HB → tool wear ↑, machining cost ↑
Thinner sectionsScrap/leak risk ↑; gating/feeding complexity ↑
Tight CT/flatnessPattern & process cost ↑; more inspection
Leak/NDT requirementsExtra process & cycle time

RFQ checklist (send with your drawing)

  • Target standard (ASTM A48 class / EN-GJL grade) or performance window (UTS/HB).
  • Section map + min walls; pressure/leak requirements; GD&T & critical datums.
  • Volume/batch, surface finish/paint; inspection scope (FAI/CMM, hardness, tensile).
  • Any field issues to avoid (noise, wear, leaks, distortion).

FAQs

Not exactly; they’re nearest neighbors. A48 is in ksi, EN-GJL is MPa; section size and method change results—sample to confirm.

Lower grades (e.g., EN-GJL-200/250) machines are easier due to lower HB and more ferrite.

When you need higher elongation/leak-tightness/impact while keeping similar castability, consider EN-GJS / ASTM A536.

You can give an HB window per area, but keep a named grade for baseline chemistry/microstructure.

Green sand typically CT9–CT10 on big envelopes; resin shell improves 1 grade; finish by machining to GD&T.

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