2. Metal Furniture: Elegance, Quality, and
Durability
Metal is a stuff applied in the construct
of everything from metal garden
furniture , unique restaurant furniture
to metal bed frames and garden
constructions. Its maybe such a
fashionable substance applied to
craftsmanship furniture due to its well-
known lastingness and robust qualities,
making it implausibly easy to maintain
and use.
3. Types of Metal Furniture
● Metal Garden Furniture
● Metal Outdoor Furniture
● Metal Industrial Furniture
● Metal Bedroom Furniture
● Metal Household Furniture
● Metal Living Room Furniture
● Metal Dining Room Furniture
● Metal Swimming Pool Furniture
4. • Ferrous Metals are metals which contain iron.
They may have small amounts of other metals
or other elements added, to give the required
properties. All ferrous metals are magnetic and
give little resistance to corrosion. Ferrous scrap
metal usually comes from sources like disposed
household appliances, old cars, old railroads
tracks, decommissioned ships, and
construction debris.
• Non-Ferrous Metals are metals which do not
contain any iron. They are not magnetic and
are usually more resistant to corrosion than
ferrous metals. Examples include aluminum,
copper, lead, zinc, nickel, titanium, and
precious metals. * IRON- a silver-white
malleable ductile magnetic heavy metallic
element that readily rusts in moist air
5. • Ferrous Metals: Ferrous Metals: Material
Description Properties Use Mild Steel An iron-
carbon alloy containing less than 0.25 percent
carbon which makes it more ductile and less
hard thus rendering it unsuitable for structural
work. Tough, high tensile strength and ductile.
Because of low carbon content it can not be
hardened and tempered.
• Corrosion resistant Kitchen draining boards,
pipes, cutlery, aircraft High Tensile Steel Low
carbon steel with minute amounts of
molybdenum, niobium, titanium, and/or
vanadium. Also, called high strength alloy
steel or high-strength, low-alloy steel. Very
strong and very tough Gears, shafts, engine
parts High Carbon Steel .
6. • The hardest of the carbon
steels. Less ductile, tough, and
malleable. Cutting Edges,
compression springs, farming
and gardening equipment, and
other high-wear applications.
Hard, brittle, strong, cheap, self-
lubricating.
• White cast iron, grey cast iron,
malleable cast iron. Heavy
crushing machinery, car cylinder
blocks, vices, machine tool
parts, brake drums, machine
handle and gear wheels,
plumbing fitments.
7. Wrought iron
• Wrought iron is a soft, ductile,
fibrous variety that is produced
from a semi fused mass of
relatively pure iron .
• It is superior for most purposes
to cast iron, which is overly hard
and brittle owing to its high
carbon content. it is heavy, which
is a challenge, but appreciated
on windy days. It needs much
care, though, and can easily rust
and corrode if not waterproofed.
8. • Stainless steel is durable, low
maintenance material and is often the
least expensive choice in a life cycle cost
comparison.
• The ease of fabrication due to the use of
modern steel- making techniques that
allow stainless steel to be cut , machined,
fabricated, welded, and formed, as
readily as traditional steels.
• The hygienic property of stainless steel
makes it the first choice in hospitals,
kitchens, food and pharmaceutical
processing facilities.
9. Aluminum is more common than steel
furniture, mostly because it does not
rust, although it oxidizes, turning into a
chalky white.
•Caste and heavy tube aluminum give
better quality.
•Tubular aluminum is flexible and
hollowing, besides less sturdy. However,
its lightness makes for an ideal poolside
furniture and is mainly used for
benches, folding chairs and swing sets.
•It is also lighter than steel, making it
more desirable.