In this article, the importance of selecting the right process parameters for ledeburitic tool steels, i.e., casting temperature, cooling rate, and soaking temperature, which is needed to improve their intrinsic hot workability, is presented. The results were obtained from investigations in industrial practice and in the laboratory. It was found that inappropriate selection of these process parameters results in the occurrence of carbides that are not usually present in these types of steels, in terms of type, shape, fractions, and their distribution that decreases the steels' hot workability. In particular, a casting temperature that is too high and cooling rates that are too low result in the additional precipitation of carbides, which are not common in these steels, leading to cracking, predominately along these carbide stringers and consequently to a deterioration of the hot workability and the properties of the final products. It was also found that by selecting the proper soaking conditions, it is possible to decrease the negative influence of previous processing parameters on the hot workability.
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