Grey Iron vs Ductile Iron: How to Choose the Right Material

Both grey iron and ductile iron are cast irons — but they behave very differently under stress. If you've ever seen a cracked pump housing or a broken valve body, the material choice was likely part of the story. This guide cuts through the confusion so you can make the right call for your application.

The Fundamental Difference: Graphite Shape

The key difference between grey iron and ductile iron lies in the shape of graphite in the microstructure:

This single microstructural difference drives nearly every performance difference between the two materials.

Mechanical Properties Comparison

PropertyGrey Iron (HT250)Grey Iron (HT300)Ductile Iron (QT400-18)Ductile Iron (QT600-3)
Tensile Strength (MPa)250300400600
Yield Strength (MPa)165195250370
Elongation (%)0.5–0.80.3–0.5183
Impact ResistanceLowLowExcellentModerate
Hardness (HB)170–210190–230130–180190–270
Damping CapacityExcellentExcellentGoodGood
Thermal ConductivityHighHighModerateModerate

Grade Naming Systems

Understanding the grade designations prevents confusion when quoting from Chinese foundries:

Chinese GB Standard (Most Common)

GradeMin. Tensile (MPa)Typical Application
HT150150Light-duty covers, brackets
HT200200General machinery, pump casings
HT250250Pump housings, valve bodies, compressor parts
HT300300High-pressure cylinders, heavy-duty gears
QT400-18400Automotive suspension, pipe fittings
QT500-7500Crankcases, gearboxes, machinery parts
QT600-3600High-stress crankshafts, steering components

ASTM / ISO Equivalents

GB GradeASTM A48ISO 185EN 1561
HT250Class 40250EN-GJL-250
HT300Class 50300EN-GJL-300
QT400-1860-40-18400-18EN-GJS-400-18
QT600-380-55-06600-3EN-GJS-600-3

When to Choose Grey Iron

Grey iron remains the workhorse of the casting industry for good reasons:

Best Applications for Grey Iron

Limitations of Grey Iron

When to Choose Ductile Iron

Ductile iron costs more, but its performance in demanding applications frequently justifies the premium:

Best Applications for Ductile Iron

Key Considerations for Ductile Iron

Head-to-Head: 5 Key Decision Factors

Decision FactorGrey IronDuctile IronWinner
Cost (material + production)$0.70–1.20/kg$0.90–1.80/kgGrey iron
Strength-to-weight ratioModerateHighDuctile iron
Thermal conductivityHigh (50–55 W/m·K)Moderate (31–36 W/m·K)Grey iron
Impact resistancePoorExcellentDuctile iron
Wear resistanceGoodGood (especially in nodular grades)Tie / Ductile

Cost Impact: What Ductile Iron Really Costs More

The price difference between grey and ductile iron is not just the material — it's the total cost of ownership:

For a typical 50 kg pump housing cast in HT250 vs QT500-7, the raw material cost difference is approximately $7–15 — often less than 5% of the total finished part cost when CNC machining is included.

Material Substitution: When to Upgrade to Ductile

If your current grey iron part is failing, upgrading to ductile iron may be the solution:

Failure Mode in Grey IronRoot CauseSolution: Switch to Ductile
Sudden fracture under shock loadBrittle, low impact resistanceQT400-18 or QT500-7
Fatigue cracks after extended serviceGraphite flakes as crack initiatorsQT500-7 or QT600-3
Cannot meet pressure class requirementsLower tensile strengthQT600-3 (rated for Class 600+ valves)
Excessive deflection under loadLow modulus but poor yieldQT600-3 with tighter section design

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the main difference between grey iron and ductile iron?

Grey iron has graphite in flake form, making it brittle. Ductile iron has spherical graphite nodules, giving it significantly higher tensile strength, ductility, and impact resistance while retaining castability.

Which is stronger: grey iron or ductile iron?

Ductile iron is significantly stronger. Tensile strength ranges from 250–400 MPa for grey iron (HT250/HT300) vs. 400–700 MPa for ductile iron (QT400/QT500/QT600), with some grades reaching 900 MPa.

Is grey iron cheaper than ductile iron?

Generally yes. Grey iron is 10–25% less expensive than ductile iron of equivalent grade due to simpler melting requirements and faster production. However, the cost difference is often justified by ductile iron's superior performance.

Which should I choose for pump housings?

For standard pump applications, HT250 grey iron is typically the best choice — it offers excellent castability, good machinability, and high thermal conductivity for heat dissipation. Use ductile iron (QT500-7 or QT600-3) when the pump handles higher pressures, experiences significant vibration or shock, or when weight reduction is critical.

Can the same foundry produce both grey and ductile iron?

Yes — most iron casting foundries can produce both. Grey iron requires basic cupola or induction melting; ductile iron requires additional Mg treatment in the ladle or in-mold. Ask your foundry about their treatment equipment and typical production grades.

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