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Crucible Industries, commonly known as Crucible, is an American company which develops and manufactures specialty steels, and is the sole producer of a line of sintered steels known as Crucible Particle Metallurgy (CPM) steels.
In 2009, Crucible Steel introduced an update to CPM-S30V to meet the needs of renowned knife maker Chris Reeve that they called CPM-S35VN. The addition of 0.5% Niobium, and reductions in both Carbon (from 1.45% to 1.40%) and Vanadium (from 4% to 3%) produced an alloy with 25% increase in measured Charpy V-notch toughness over S30V (Crucible claims 15-20% improvement).
154CM is a type of stainless steel developed and manufactured in the United States by Crucible Materials Corporation (now - Crucible Industries).Crucible 154CM is a modification of martensitic stainless steel type 440C to which molybdenum has been added.
Most historians who write about Crucible begin with the same founding events, but having Crucible in the name does not start until 1900. Then there is central site where Crucible has continuously produced steel, Syracuse. And there is the intellectual property. I decided to use them all to explain its history based the central-continuing location.
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154CM [26] is produced by Crucible Industries. [13] It is used extensively by Benchmade Knife Company and many others. CPM 154 is identical to 154CM in composition, however it is produced by Crucible using CPM Process, [14] bringing all the benefits of Particle Metallurgy technology. [7] [27] ATS-34 is produced by Hitachi Metals. [28]
Keystone Holdings LLC, a trust of the Coors family that owned 27% of CoorsTek stock, bought the remaining 73% it did not already own, and took the company private once again in 2003. [ 68 ] John Coors had been the president of Golden Genesis Corp. (GGC), a manufacturer of photovoltaic devices for solar power collection in Scottsdale, Arizona .
Dixon Mills is a residential complex in Jersey City, New Jersey that uses the buildings of the former location of the Joseph Dixon Crucible Company, which was in use between 1847 and 1895. [1] There is a small museum with artifacts from the building and its history in the lobby of the complex. [2]