How to Pick Ductile Iron Grades: ASTM A536 vs EN-GJS

ductile iron grades ASTM A536 vs EN-GJS

Who this helps: Buyers and Design Engineers selecting ductile (nodular/SG) iron for housings, hubs, brackets, manifolds and pressure-tight parts.
What you’ll get: a clean A536 ↔ EN-GJS cross-reference, typical property windows, and a practical grade selection path you can put on drawings.

Prepared by YB Metal Solution. Share your drawing—YB Metal will return a material recommendation, process notes and a quote.

Author: YB Metal Solution Engineering Team (hereafter YB Metal)

Table of contents

  • How A536 and EN-GJS map (and where they don’t)
  • Cross-reference table: ASTM A536 ↔ EN-GJS
  • Typical properties & what shifts them
  • Selection guide: pick the grade by design driver
  • Notes for drawings: CT, Ra, stock, testing
  • Process & cost considerations
  • What YB Metal delivers
  • FAQs

How A536 and EN-GJS map (and where they don’t)

Choose shell molding over green/resin sand when you need:

  • ASTM A536 grade notation is UTS–Yield–Elongation in ksi/% (e.g., 65-45-12).
  • EN 1563 (EN-GJS) uses UTS–Elongation in MPa/% (e.g., EN-GJS-450-10).
  • Both specify minimums on test pieces; actual casting properties vary with section size, matrix (ferrite/pearlite), and process. Use the table below as a practical mapping, not a legal equivalence.

Cross-reference table: ASTM A536 ↔ EN-GJS

ASTM A536 Grade (UTS–YS–El%)Approx. MPa (UTS)Typical EN-GJS Pairing (UTS–El%)Where it’s used
60-40-18~415EN-GJS-400-18Ferritic DI: maximum ductility, low-temp toughness, pressure parts, shock loading.
65-45-12~450EN-GJS-450-10General-purpose DI for housings, brackets, hubs—balance of ductility and strength.
80-55-06~550EN-GJS-500-7Pearlitic/ferritic DI: higher strength, good fatigue; common for hubs/flanges.
100-70-03~690EN-GJS-700-2High-strength DI: loaded arms, carriers; watch elongation & section size.
120-90-02~830EN-GJS-800-2 / 900-2Very high strength; consider section-size limits, machining & impact trade-offs.

Synonyms: ductile iron = nodular iron / SG iron / spheroidal-graphite iron; EN uses GJS (spheroidal).

Typical properties & what shifts them

Indicative windows for design screening at room temperature. Your part’s data depends on wall (mm/in), cooling, matrix and heat treatment.

PropertyFerritic DI (e.g., 60-40-18 / EN-GJS-400-18)Balanced DI (65-45-12 / EN-GJS-450-10)Higher-strength DI (80-55-06 / 100-70-03 ≈ EN-GJS-500-7 / 700-2)
UTS (MPa)~400–460~440–520~520–750
Yield (MPa)~250–320~300–380~370–520
Elongation (%)~14–22~8–14~2–8
Hardness (HBW)~140–190~170–220~200–270
Fatigue (R=-1, MPa)~160–200~180–230~200–280
Low-temp toughnessBest (down to −40 °C)GoodCheck vs spec; can drop with pearlite

What moves the numbers

  • Matrix: more pearlite → ↑UTS/HB/fatigue, but ↓elongation & low-temp toughness.
  • Section size: thin walls (≤10 mm / 0.4 in) cool faster → stronger; heavy sections trend lower.
  • Heat treatment: normalize for stronger/pearlitic matrices; austemper for ADI grades (see ADI guide).
  • Magnesium treatment & inoculation quality: graphite nodule count/shape drives ductility and toughness.

Selection guide: pick the grade by design driver

Design driverRecommended gradesWhy
Max ductility / leak-tight / −40 °C service60-40-18 / EN-GJS-400-18 or 65-45-12 / EN-GJS-450-10 (ferrite-rich)Ferritic matrix absorbs impact and resists brittle behavior at low temp.
Balanced cost–strength for housings/hubs65-45-12 / EN-GJS-450-10Common workhorse; easy to machine; solid fatigue margin.
Fatigue-critical hubs/flanges/arms80-55-06 / EN-GJS-500-7Higher UTS/HB improves fatigue; still machinable.
High static load / stiffness with limited ductility100-70-03 / EN-GJS-700-2High strength—watch section size and impact.
Weight reduction vs ductile ironADI (e.g., 900-6 / 1050-6)Strength-to-weight boost; confirm NVH & machining. See ADI page.

Helpful internal reads:

Notes for drawings: CT, Ra, stock, testing

  • Material call-out (example):
  • EN-GJS-450-10 (ASTM A536 65-45-12 acceptable). Ferrite ≥ 60% on sealing faces.”
  • As-cast tolerance: specify ISO 8062-3 CT by size band (e.g., CT8–CT10 typical for mid-size housings).
  • Surface finish: as-cast Ra 6.3–12.5 µm (resin/green); sealing faces after machining Ra 1.6–3.2 µm.
  • Machining stock: faces/ODs +1.5–3.0 mm (0.06–0.12 in); bores by diameter band.
  • Testing on first articles: spectrometer per heat, hardness trend, tensile on coupons, microstructure at SC zones; leak/NDT if pressure-tight.

Process & cost considerations

  • Green sand is cost-leading for mainstream housings/hubs; see capability/cost
  • Resin sand gives cleaner surfaces and core freedom on complex parts; compare
  • Shell molding helps thin walls and CT tightening; see thin-wall rules → (your shell-molding page).
  • Tooling vs piece price: for high volumes or tighter CT, higher tooling may pay back; see break-even guide → (your tooling vs piece price page).

What YBmetal delivers

YB Metal Solution pours EN-GJS-400–700 (A536 60-40-18 → 100-70-03) with:

  • Processes: green/resin sand; shell cores for thin features.
  • Metallurgy & QA: OES chemistry, nodule count/shape, tensile & hardness, microstructure.
  • Inspection: CMM & 3D scan on datum scheme; PPAP/FAI up to Level 3.
  • Finish: machining and coatings (epoxy/powder) with DFT logs.

Want a grade and process recommendation? Upload your drawingYB Metal will return the best-fit grade, CT band and machining stock plan.

FAQs

They’re practical equivalents on test pieces (UTS/elongation close). Validate on your section sizes.

Ferrite-rich 60-40-18 / EN-GJS-400-18 (and some 65-45-12) usually outperform pearlitic grades for low-temp toughness.

When static loads or stiffness demand it and the design tolerates lower elongation; verify impact/section-size effects.

Generally yes—hardness and pearlite raise tool wear. Balance Ra targets and cycle time.

Local cooling and constraint make matrix/graphite different from bars. Control wall uniformity, fillets and gating; confirm via micrographs on cast samples.

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