In cement and mining operations, wear parts are not consumables—they are performance-critical assets. Yet most decisions are still made on grade labels like “18% Cr” or “28% Cr,” ignoring microstructure, application conditions, and failure mechanisms.
This guide is built for engineers and decision-makers who want clear, technical answers backed by real performance logic.
🔥 Section 1: Material Selection Guide
18% vs 28% High Chrome – Engineering Difference
| Parameter | 18% Cr | 28% Cr |
| Carbide Volume | Moderate | High |
| Hardness | 52–58 HRC | 58–65 HRC |
| Toughness | Higher | Lower |
| Wear Type | Impact + abrasion | Pure abrasion |
| Failure Mode | Wear-out | Brittle fracture |
Key Metallurgical Insight:
- 18% Cr → discontinuous carbides + tougher matrix
- 28% Cr → dense carbide network → superior wear but brittle
When to Use MMC (Metal Matrix Composite)
Use MMC when:
- Impact + abrasion coexist (real plant conditions)
- High chrome parts are breaking, not wearing out
- Downtime cost is high
Why MMC Works:
- Ceramic phase → extreme hardness (abrasion resistance)
- Metal matrix → impact absorption
- Disrupted crack path → improved durability
Impact vs Abrasion Selection Chart
| Condition | Best Material |
| High impact, low abrasion | Manganese steel |
| Moderate impact + abrasion | 18% Cr |
| High abrasion, low impact | 28% Cr |
| High impact + high abrasion | MMC (recommended) |
🔥 Section 2: Failure Analysis
Why Blow Bars Fail
WHERE:
- Leading edge and impact zone
ROOT CAUSE:
- High chrome = brittle carbide network
- Repeated impact → microcracks → edge chipping
RESULT:
- Progressive loss → catastrophic failure
Why Liners Crack
WHERE:
- Bolt holes, lifting face, thick sections
ROOT CAUSE:
- Residual stresses from casting
- Improper heat treatment
- High impact + brittle structure
Common Mistakes by Plants
❌ Using 28% Cr in high-impact zones
❌ Selecting material based only on hardness
❌ Ignoring wear pattern analysis
❌ No root cause study before replacement
👉 Result: repeated failures with different suppliers
🔥 Section 3: Application Engineering
Cement Mill: 1st vs 2nd Chamber
1st Chamber:
- High impact from grinding media
- Recommended: 18% Cr / MMC
2nd Chamber:
- Fine grinding → abrasion dominant
- Recommended: 28% Cr / MMC zones
VRM vs Ball Mill
VRM (Vertical Roller Mill):
- Compressive grinding
- Micro-abrasion + pressure
Best Material:
- 18–22% Cr + MMC reinforcement
Ball Mill:
- Impact + sliding abrasion
Best Material:
- 25–28% Cr for liners
- High chrome grinding media
Crusher vs Cooler
Crusher:
- High impact + abrasion
- Best: MMC / manganese hybrid
Cooler:
- Thermal + abrasive wear
- Best: heat-resistant alloys + MMC zones
🔥 Section 4: Performance Proof
Case Study 1: Clinker Crusher Hammers
- Standard 18% Cr life: 20–25 days
- MMC upgraded life: 50–60 days
👉 2.3× life increase
👉 ~30% reduction in shutdowns
Case Study 2: Blow Bars
- Edge failure in 8–10 days (high chrome)
- MMC version: 25–30 days
👉 ~3× wear life
👉 Near elimination of breakage
Case Study 3: Ball Mill Liners
- Standard liner life: baseline
- Optimized 28% Cr + MMC:
👉 1.8× life increase
👉 12–15% reduction in media consumption
Cost per Ton Comparison
| Parameter | High Chrome | MMC |
| Initial Cost | 1x | 1.5–1.7x |
| Life | 1x | 2–3x |
| Cost per Ton | Higher | 20–40% lower |
🔥 Section 5: Technical Specs (REAL DETAIL)
Chemical Composition (Typical Ranges)
18% Cr:
- C: 2.5–3.2%
- Cr: 16–20%
- Mo: 0.5–1.5%
- Ni: 0.5–1.5%
28% Cr:
- C: 2.8–3.5%
- Cr: 26–30%
- Mo: 0.5–2.0%
- Ni: 0.5–1.5%
Hardness Zones (Critical Concept)
- Surface: 58–65 HRC (wear zone)
- Core: Lower hardness → higher toughness
👉 Uniform hardness = poor design
Heat Treatment Approach
1. Destabilization (950–1050°C)
- Secondary carbide formation
- Austenite reduction
2. Quenching
- Martensitic transformation
3. Tempering (200–400°C)
- Stress relief + toughness
What Good Microstructure Looks Like
✔ Refined, discontinuous carbides
✔ Martensitic matrix
✔ Minimal retained austenite
💣 Final Reality Check
Right now, most plants are:
- Choosing suppliers based on ₹/kg
- Ignoring failure mechanisms
- Repeating the same material mistakes
What Actually Works
👉 Understand wear mechanism
👉 Match material to application
👉 Use MMC where conditions demand
👉 Track cost per ton—not purchase price
Final Thought
You don’t have a “casting problem.”
You have a material + application mismatch problem.
At GREY Composite Wear Technologies, we solve this by combining:
- Metallurgical control
- Application engineering
- MMC innovation
Because the difference between an average supplier and a premium one is simple:
One sells castings.
The other solves problems.

