BiPolarMoment
Mechanical
- Mar 28, 2006
- 617
At my last company ~5 years ago we specified most if not all of our stainless instrument materials "per ASTM F899" as that is a blanket specification that includes such specifications as A276, A484 et. al. As far as I am aware, the chemical requirements of F899 are identical to those of the referenced specification with a few exceptions (I don't believe 440A is one of them). I don't remember ever having trouble getting parts quoted/produced back then.
Now at my current company we have an internal specification for some materials (e.g. 17-4) but 440 is not one of them. Since I don't have an internal specification to cite I've gone back to referencing F899. However, now I'm getting notice from vendors that they are not able to source that material unless they buy a considerable minimum qty which is no good for price or time. In the short term I've been able to get around this by agreeing the material certified to A276 is "compliant" to F899 and is therefore acceptable.
I admit there is probably an additional burden to certifying to F899 but I'm not sure what it is; and that doesn't necessarily explain the discrepancies in my experience. Can someone enlighten me? One vendor claimed that F899 required a vacuum melt vs. an airmelt for A276 but I've not been able to find where it says this.
The 'simple' solution is to spec A276 but I'd rather understand where the problem lies. It's possibly my memory, but I haven't admitted that yet.
Now at my current company we have an internal specification for some materials (e.g. 17-4) but 440 is not one of them. Since I don't have an internal specification to cite I've gone back to referencing F899. However, now I'm getting notice from vendors that they are not able to source that material unless they buy a considerable minimum qty which is no good for price or time. In the short term I've been able to get around this by agreeing the material certified to A276 is "compliant" to F899 and is therefore acceptable.
I admit there is probably an additional burden to certifying to F899 but I'm not sure what it is; and that doesn't necessarily explain the discrepancies in my experience. Can someone enlighten me? One vendor claimed that F899 required a vacuum melt vs. an airmelt for A276 but I've not been able to find where it says this.
The 'simple' solution is to spec A276 but I'd rather understand where the problem lies. It's possibly my memory, but I haven't admitted that yet.