Silicon carbide is not the best material to grind austenitic stainless steels because it contaminates the material with carbon, giving way to intergranular corrosion.
Austenitic stainless steels should be ground with aluminum oxyde or zirconia grinding wheels. I can't see any reason why zirconia shouldn't be used. May be your customer has a special reason that we don't know. If I were you, I'd ask him what reason is it.
Giovanni S. Crisi
Sao Paulo - Brazil
Hello JustinT,
I'm a welding engineering working the nuclear field, however I do government work and we are not subject to commercial standards. Zirconium is generally used inside reactor vessels, but seeing as this is 300 SS work, I'm guessing it's the steam and piping side. Hence I don't think it would be a poison or criticality issue.
I've never heard of a restriction on zirconia alumina grinding, I know the effects of SS on zirconium (negative) but not the other way around. The easiest thing would be to request engineering information. There could be some obscure reaction going on here, or zirconia could help contribute to corrosion or stress corrosion. I found that in the nuclear industry a lot of things that sneak into the code have been there for decades, probably were put in for a good reason but few if any know why they were there.
In the short run the cost of consumables should be built into the product or bid. I'm sure a few dollars in grinding consumables isn't killing profits.