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When specifying stainless steel ball valves, three material designations appear on nearly every datasheet and purchase order: SS304, SS316, and CF8M. For procurement engineers and project buyers, understanding the differences between these materials — and knowing where each belongs in a piping system — is essential for making cost-effective, technically compliant valve selections.
This guide explains what each material is, how they compare in performance, where they are used in a valve assembly, and how to choose the right one for your application.
Quick Reference: SS304 = CF8 (cast equivalent) | SS316 = CF8M (cast equivalent). The “SS” grades are wrought (forged/rolled); the “CF” grades are their cast counterparts used for valve bodies.
1. What Are These Three Materials?
SS304 — The Workhorse Stainless Steel
SS304 (AISI 304, UNS S30400) is the most widely used stainless steel in the world. It contains approximately 18% chromium and 8% nickel, with no molybdenum. Its cast equivalent is CF8 (ASTM A351). SS304 offers excellent general corrosion resistance, good formability, and is available at the lowest cost among the three grades. It is the go-to choice for non-aggressive environments.
SS316 — The Marine-Grade Stainless Steel
SS316 (AISI 316, UNS S31600) adds 2–3% molybdenum to the SS304 composition, bringing chromium to ~16–18% and nickel to ~10–14%. This molybdenum addition is the critical differentiator: it dramatically improves resistance to pitting corrosion and crevice corrosion in chloride-containing environments. SS316 is the standard specification for marine, offshore, chemical, and pharmaceutical applications. It costs approximately 15–25% more than SS304.
CF8M — The Cast Version of SS316
CF8M (ASTM A351 Grade CF8M) is the investment casting grade equivalent to SS316. The chemical composition is nearly identical — 18–21% Cr, 9–12% Ni, 2–3% Mo — but CF8M is produced by pouring molten metal into a mold rather than forging or rolling. This casting process makes CF8M ideal for manufacturing complex valve body geometries that would be expensive or impossible to forge. In a ball valve specification, when you see “body: CF8M,” it means the valve body casting is the equivalent of SS316.
2. Performance Comparison
Corrosion Resistance
The key metric for comparing stainless steel corrosion performance is the PREN (Pitting Resistance Equivalent Number), calculated as: PREN = %Cr + 3.3 × %Mo + 16 × %N. Higher PREN = better pitting resistance.
- SS304 / CF8: PREN ≈ 18–20 — suitable for mildly corrosive environments, fresh water, food-grade, and general industrial service
- SS316 / CF8M: PREN ≈ 24–26 — the molybdenum addition provides significantly better resistance to chloride pitting, acid attack, and crevice corrosion
In practical terms: if your process involves seawater, salt spray, chlorinated water, acids, or coastal/offshore environments, SS316/CF8M is required. SS304/CF8 will suffer accelerated pitting failure in these conditions.
Mechanical Properties
SS304 and SS316 have very similar mechanical properties. Both are austenitic stainless steels with tensile strength around 515–620 MPa, yield strength ~205 MPa, and excellent toughness at both high and cryogenic temperatures. Neither can be hardened by heat treatment. The cast grades (CF8, CF8M) have slightly lower mechanical properties than their wrought equivalents due to the inherent porosity of the casting process — this is why forged SS316 (F316) is specified for extremely high-pressure applications (Class 1500/2500) while CF8M is standard for Class 150–600.
Temperature Range
Both SS304/CF8 and SS316/CF8M perform well across a wide temperature range: –196°C (cryogenic) to +870°C continuous service. For temperatures above 425°C in sustained service, the low-carbon variants (SS304L / CF3 and SS316L / CF3M) are preferred to prevent sensitization and intergranular corrosion.
Cost
- SS304 / CF8: Baseline cost — most economical stainless option
- SS316 / CF8M: 15–25% premium over SS304/CF8 — driven by molybdenum content
- The premium narrows for small-bore valves; for large valves, the material cost difference becomes significant in bulk procurement
3. Where Each Material Is Used in a Ball Valve
A ball valve is not a single material — different components are made from different grades based on their function and exposure to the process medium:
| Valve Component | Typical Material | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Body / End Caps | CF8M or CF8 | Cast for complex geometry; CF8M for corrosive service |
| Ball | SS316 (forged/machined) | Direct media contact; requires dense, pore-free surface |
| Stem | SS316 (forged bar) | Moving part under stress; dense grain structure critical |
| Seats | PTFE / RPTFE / Metal | Sealing performance; material matched to temperature/media |
| Bolts / Nuts | SS304 or SS316 | External fasteners; SS316 for marine/offshore |
| Packing | PTFE / Graphite | Stem sealing; not metallic |
This is why a valve datasheet may list: “Body: CF8M, Ball: SS316, Stem: SS316, Seats: PTFE” — each component is optimized independently. CF8M for the body provides the economical casting; SS316 for the ball and stem provides the dense, corrosion-resistant precision surfaces that contact the medium and undergo mechanical stress.
4. Comparison: CF8M vs SS316 vs SS304
| Attribute | SS304 / CF8 | SS316 | CF8M |
|---|---|---|---|
| Standard | AISI 304 / ASTM A351 CF8 | AISI 316 (wrought) | ASTM A351 CF8M (cast) |
| Chromium (%) | 18–20 | 16–18 | 18–21 |
| Nickel (%) | 8–12 | 10–14 | 9–12 |
| Molybdenum (%) | None | 2–3 | 2–3 |
| PREN | 18–20 | 24–26 | 24–26 |
| Form / Process | Wrought / Cast | Wrought (forged/rolled) | Cast only |
| Chloride Resistance | Moderate | High | High |
| Relative Cost | Lowest | Medium-High | Medium-High |
| Valve Body Use | CF8 for general service | Rarely used for body | Standard for SS316-equiv. bodies |
| Ball / Stem Use | CF8 / SS304 for mild service | Standard for ball & stem | Not typical for ball/stem |
| Typical Service | Water, food, HVAC, general | Chemical, pharma, marine | Chemical, offshore, corrosive |
5. Applicable Scenarios
When to Choose SS304 / CF8
- Potable water, HVAC, fire suppression systems
- Food and beverage processing (non-acidic, non-chloride)
- General industrial utility lines (compressed air, steam, non-corrosive chemicals)
- Indoor installations with no chloride exposure
- Budget-sensitive projects where corrosion risk is genuinely low
When to Choose SS316 / CF8M
- Seawater, brackish water, or coastal/offshore environments
- Chemical processing: acids, alkalis, chloride solutions, solvents
- Pharmaceutical and biotech: water-for-injection (WFI), CIP/SIP systems
- Desalination plants and water treatment with chlorine dosing
- Marine and subsea applications
- Pulp and paper industry: bleaching chemical lines
- Any service where pitting or crevice corrosion is a failure risk
6. Impact on Valve Selection and Procurement
For procurement professionals, understanding CF8M vs SS316 vs SS304 has direct practical implications:
- Read the full material list, not just the body material. A “CF8M valve” with SS304 ball and stem delivers less corrosion resistance where it matters most — at the flow surfaces.
- Request Mill Test Reports (MTRs) for all wetted components. CF8M and SS316 look identical; PMI (Positive Material Identification) testing is the only field verification method.
- Match the entire valve material package to the worst-case service condition. Don’t under-specify to save cost if chloride exposure is a real risk — premature failure costs far more than the material premium.
- Consider SS316L / CF3M for welded connections — the low-carbon variants prevent sensitization and intergranular corrosion in the heat-affected zone.
- Bulk procurement tip: For mixed-service projects, standardizing on CF8M body / SS316 trim as the default specification eliminates material mix-up risk at a modest cost premium.
7. Conclusion
SS304, SS316, and CF8M are not competing alternatives — they are complementary materials that work together within a single valve assembly. SS304 (CF8) is the economical baseline for general service. SS316 is the precision-machined grade for balls, stems, and high-stress components requiring dense, corrosion-resistant surfaces. CF8M is the cast equivalent of SS316 used for valve bodies and complex-geometry components where casting is the most practical manufacturing method.
For any procurement decision involving stainless steel ball valves, the single most important question is: does the process medium contain chlorides or other aggressive agents? If yes, SS316/CF8M is the correct choice — specifying SS304/CF8 to save cost in a chloride-bearing service is a false economy that leads to premature valve failure and unplanned maintenance costs.


