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maraging steel
[ mahr-ey-jing ]
noun
- a low-carbon steel that has been heated and quenched to form martensite: contains up to 25 percent nickel.
maraging steel
/ ˈmɑːˌreɪdʒɪŋ /
noun
- a strong low-carbon steel containing nickel and small amounts of titanium, aluminium, and niobium, produced by transforming to a martensitic structure and heating at 500°C
Word History and Origins
Origin of maraging steel1
Word History and Origins
Origin of maraging steel1
Example Sentences
The UiHi is a three-piece hollow construction that features a forged frame, a forged maraging steel face and a tungsten weight plug in the sole to improve off-center hit stability.
The first true players distance irons the company has introduced, the 845 Forged utilizes a three-piece hollow construction that starts with a S20C carbon steel body and hosel, adds a high-strength, faster-flexing, softer-feeling HT1770 maraging steel L-shaped face plate and balances the design with a meaty 40-gram internal slug of tungsten braised into the frame low and toward the toe for stability and higher launch.
Like its predecessor, the G710 irons use a maraging steel face insert.
The maraging steel face provides metalwood-like face flex that launches the ball higher, allowing for slightly stronger lofts for more distance without sacrificing the shot-stopping ability that comes with height on iron shots.
The face remains HT1770 Maraging Steel face and is an ultra-thin 58/1000ths of an inch, or slightly thicker than a dime.
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