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					Hex tool manufacturers 
					do not all use the same type of alloy steel. Chrome vanadium, 1050 carbon 
					steel, S2, and 8650 are all common grades in use. 
								
					
						- Protanium® Steel 
						is a proprietary alloy steel developed and used only by 
						Bondhus. It is the hardest, most ductile, and longest 
						wearing steel that exists in the hex tool industry.
 
						- 8650 is the most common grade in use throughout the U.S. and 
						the Far East. It does not have the hardness or 
						ductility of Protanium® Steel
 
						- Chrome Vanadium 
						is about comparable in quality to 8650. It is used 
						primarily in Europe.
 
						- Chrome Moly is similar to Chrome Vanadium, but is 
						somewhat stronger and harder. Because it is fairly expensive, 
						manufacturers generally only use it on their higher 
						grade and higher priced tools like ball head products,
						and substitute lower grades for 
						their other tools. Europe and Japan are the primary users.
 
						- S2 is used by only a small number of 
						manufacturers. It is harder than 8650, but it is also less ductile, more 
						costly, and far more prone to shattering.
 
						- 1050 carbon steel is low-grade steel that is 
						inferior to those listed above. It is still used by some manufacturers in Europe 
						and Asia.
 
					 
		 
					 Some of the factors that affect the 
					performance of steel, and the tools manufactured from 
					it, are: hardness, ductility, grain size, alloy 
					composition, and heat treating. Metallurgists and tool 
					makers understand that behind these characteristics 
					stand the deeper concepts of lattice structure, bonding, 
					crystal formation, dislocations, phase transformation, 
					quench rates, and heat treating to mention just a few. 
														
					What these concepts mean, and how they all work 
					together, is fundamental to understanding why Bondhus 
					tools work better, last longer, and are safer to use. 
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