Technical

ASTM A105 Forged Flange Chemistry, Hardness and Heat Treatment

A buyer's guide to ASTM A105 forged carbon steel flange chemistry limits, Brinell hardness ceiling, manganese-carbon trade-off and heat treatment options.

May 16, 20267 min readHebei Haihao Group
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Why this matters

ASTM A105 is the workhorse specification for forged carbon steel flanges, fittings and valves used in ambient and elevated-temperature pressure piping. Most procurement disputes around A105 forged flange orders trace back to three areas: chemistry, hardness and heat treatment. Getting these right at the PO stage avoids re-inspection, NCRs and costly site rejections.

This guide summarises what the standard actually requires, what the common interpretation pitfalls are, and what to write into your inquiry to your forging supplier.

Key technical facts

The ASTM A105 / ASME SA-105 specification sets the following ladle (heat) chemistry limits for the base composition:

ElementLimit (wt %)
Carbon (C)0.35 max
Manganese (Mn)0.60 - 1.05
Phosphorus (P)0.035 max
Sulfur (S)0.040 max
Silicon (Si)0.10 - 0.35

A105 also allows a controlled trade between carbon and manganese: for each 0.01% reduction in carbon below 0.35%, an additional 0.06% manganese above 1.05% is permitted, up to a Mn ceiling of 1.65%. This is the basis for many modern "low-carbon, high-Mn" A105 heats that improve weldability while staying inside the standard.

Hardness on the finished forging shall be 137 to 187 HB (Brinell). This is a relatively narrow window; soft heats below 137 HB are just as much a non-conformance as hard heats above 187 HB.

Decision matrix: chemistry and heat treatment

Buyer concernWhat to specify in the PO
Welding to high-CE pipeCap CEV (IIW formula) at 0.43 max in addition to A105
Sour service downstreamAdd NACE MR0175 / ISO 15156 compliance and 22 HRC max
Low-temperature exposureSwitch to ASTM A350 LF2; A105 has no impact requirement
Sizes above NPS 4Require normalizing (per Supplementary Requirement S7 or PO note)
Repair weldsRequire disclosure and PWHT records

A105 itself does not mandate a specific heat treatment for flanges below the standard's threshold sizes, but normalizing, annealing, or quench-and-temper are all permitted to reach the chemistry / hardness / mechanical envelope. For larger forged flanges and non-standard forgings, normalizing is the most common choice as it refines grain and stabilises mechanical properties.

Common procurement mistakes

  1. Assuming A105 has impact toughness. It does not, by default. If your design temperature is below 0 degC, specify A350 LF2 instead.
  2. Ignoring the Mn/C trade. Some buyers reject heats with Mn above 1.05% even though the standard explicitly permits up to 1.65% with a corresponding C reduction.
  3. Confusing supplier hardness reports with batch hardness. A105 hardness is a per-forging requirement, not a per-heat one. Insist on traceable hardness on every forging.
  4. Forgetting the 4 inch / NPS 4 PWHT trigger. Larger forgings made by hot working have a heat treatment requirement that must appear on the MTC.
  5. Mixing A105 and A105N in the same PO line. A105N is the same specification with a normalized heat treatment supplementary requirement; treat it as a distinct deliverable.

Buyer checklist

  • Confirm chemistry on the EN 10204 3.1 or 3.2 MTC, including the Mn/C trade if invoked.
  • Verify Brinell hardness 137-187 HB on each forging.
  • For NPS 4 and above (or hot-worked forgings beyond standard thresholds), confirm normalizing and supplier documentation of soak temperature and time.
  • Ask for the CEV calculation if you intend to weld to thick-wall pipe.
  • Cross-reference our forged flanges and non-standard forgings catalogue and request a sample MTC before placing the full order.
  • For combined orders with seamless butt-welding pipe fittings, align heat numbers where possible to simplify site documentation.
  • Send your enquiry through our inquiry form with size, rating, face type and any supplementary NACE / impact requirements.

Sources

  • https://www.octalsteel.com/pdf/astm-a105-flange-specification.pdf
  • https://www.valvespecifications.com/material/astm-a105-chemical-composition-mechanical-properties
  • http://www.metalspiping.com/astm-a105.html

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