NAZ14... General comment...
Deducing a specific alloy based on a single chemical check analysis can be difficult, since each alloy has it's 'variation limits'... and those limits may be 'allowed' a slight variation above or below [those limits] by another governing test spec.
AMS2259 Chemical Check Analysis Limits Wrought Low-Alloy and Carbon Steels helps define this quandary.
A classic example is thus...
The slight chemical variations between 4340M and 300M steel ... all within each-other's 'limit envelops'... can make segregating one from the other virtually impossible... without added physical and metallurgical [grain] evaluation/testing. NOTE the differences between 4340 and 4340M and is simply re-processing for trash/tramp-element removal/control; and/or added special wrought processing to improve the grain for physical or mechanical properties.
The best approach is as suggested earlier: ASK the vendor... but with a legitimate engineering need that demands a precise answer... and be prepared to sign proprietary rights agreements for this information. Soooo... Is 'knowing' worth the effort/cost?
NOTE: Your vendor may have a proprietary formulation for the steel in their high performance chains; or may actually allow 1-or-2-or-3 similar alternate alloys depending on 'cost/performance' or 'special performance' requirements... such as for use in extreme/non-standard environments... or not.
Regards, Wil Taylor
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