Hardox® HiAce wear plate beats stainless steel with cost savings and durability in harsh corrosive environments

I’m Jonas Allebert and I’ve spent many years working with wear-resistant materials. In my experience, Hardox® HiAce represents a significant advancement in wear-resistant steels. It delivers the same excellent hardness, yield strength, toughness and workshop performance as our renowned Hardox® 450 steel – but with one key difference: Hardox® HiAce is specifically designed to tackle corrosive wear. In environments where acids, sulfates, ammonia or salts are present, they create a corrosive wear mechanism that will attack and oxidize the steel surface, dramatically accelerating wear and reducing equipment life.
One of the applications that Jonas Allebert tested was a garbage truck floor in Hardox® HiAce. Despite the corrosive wear conditions, the extremely low wear rate points to a service life of 20 years!
In such conditions, simply opting for a harder steel isn’t enough. That’s why I recommend Hardox®HiAce across industries facing corrosive challenges — from waste collection and pulp and paper to wood handling, recycling, agriculture, and transportation.
Why stainless steel falls short in corrosive environments
In our tests comparing stainless steel, Hardox® HiAce and commercial AR400 steel, one clear factor emerged: Hardox®HiAce’s superior hardness. Standard S304 stainless steel, for example, typically measures around 200HBW. This level of hardness results in a corrosive wear resistance that’s roughly 20% lower than that of Hardox®HiAce. Moreover, when you factor in the higher material costs of stainless steel, switching to Hardox®HiAce can lead to cost reductions of up to 50%.
Even if stainless steel manages to avoid corrosion, its relatively low wear and dent resistance often results in premature failure and costly replacements. With a yield strength of around 205MPa compared to Hardox®HiAce’s robust 1250 MPa, stainless steel is much more susceptible to dents under impact loads. And once dents occur, sliding wear becomes more severe, further cutting short the equipment’s service life.
Material | Hardness HBW | Toughness (typical) | Relative service life in corrosive wear* | Relative cost* |
Hardox®HiAce | 425-475 | 50 J at -40 °C | 1 | 1 |
Stainless steel S304 | ≤201 | 60 J at -40 °C | 0.8 | 2 |
AR 400 steel | 400 | 30 J at -40 °C | 0.5 | 1.7 |
*Tested in pH 4 abrasive conditions. Service life and costs are relative and depend on real-life circumstances at the time of writing. They should not be interpreted as guaranteed results for any specific application.
Verified impact dent performance
I’ve also had the opportunity to oversee impact tests comparing a 3mm thick Hardox®HiAce plate with a 5mm thick 304 stainless steel plate. Using a drop hammer rig — with a 250kg weight falling from 2.82m — we observed an average dent depth of only 18mm on the Hardox®HiAce plate. In contrast, the stainless steel plate suffered dents averaging 41mm, which is nearly 2.3 times deeper. These results clearly demonstrate the practical benefits of Hardox®HiAce in reducing denting and extending service life.
18 mm dent depth in 3 mm Hardox® HiAce, compared to 41 mm dent depth in 5 mm SS304.
Real-world success stories
These impressive test results aren’t just numbers — they translate into tangible benefits for customers. Here are two of their stories.
Stena Recycling triples equipment lifespan with Hardox®HiAce
At Stena Recycling, Sweden’s leading recycling company, massive steel drums clean and separate about 1,000 metric tons of non-ferrous materials every day. But the wet recycling process created a corrosive wear environment, causing severe damage to the drums. Frequent maintenance and unexpected downtime were becoming costly challenges. Stena Recycling had to find a better solution than stainless steel – and found it in Hardox® HiAce. By making the switch, they tripled the lifespan of their equipment, significantly reducing maintenance costs and operational disruptions.
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The recycling drum contains many grid segments with slits that allow the water to pass through. The previous solution using stainless steel had a shorter lifespan due to wear and impact, since the stainless steel is not as hard and strong as Hardox® HiAce. Stena Recycling runs the grid down to approximately 3 mm (0.118”) before replacing the segments, which translates to about 3 times longer service life than for the stainless segments.
Garbage truck operator looks forward to 20 years of reliable performance
For the Swedish waste management company Allmiljö, durability is everything. That’s why SSAB has been monitoring the wear on one of their garbage trucks built with Hardox® HiAce flooring — an upgrade from stainless S304. After 15 weeks in operation, wear measurements showed minimal material loss — just under 3% of the original 4.95mm (0.195") thickness.
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Even more impressively, after 1.5 years, the maximum wear recorded was only 0.27mm, less than 6%. Based on these results, the estimated service life of the floor is nearly 20 years. This aligns with SSAB’s wear-corrosion testing, where Hardox® HiAce demonstrated 2.7 times longer service life than the previous stainless steel solution in corrosive wear conditions, but at half the (relative) cost. The extended lifespan also opens the door for future weight-saving design improvements, making the truck even more efficient in the long run.
Come talk to us at Bauma 2025, Hall A6, stand 439, to learn more about how Hardox® HiAce can make a real difference in your operations.
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