Carbon steel due to the formation of pearlite layers of very weak and fragile, but the structural steel due to the strong molecular bonds are
1015 is stronger
There are 4 they are Low Carbon steel, Medium Carbon Steel, High Carbon Steel and Eutectiod
Carbon steel, also called plain-carbon steel, is steel where the main alloying constituent is carbon
The various uses of carbon steel depend on the amount of carbon added to the alloy; for instance, carbon steel with the lowest amount of carbon is called wrought iron and is used for things like fencing. Medium-carbon steel, also called mild steel, is the type of steel that is used for structural purposes in buildings and bridges. High-carbon steel is used for springs and steel wires, while ultra-high carbon steel is called cast iron and is often used to make pots.
By appointment carbon steel is classified by structural and instrumental. Depending on the quality of structural carbon steel is divided into quality steel and steel of ordinary quality, instrumental - for quality and high performance. Depending on the degree of deoxidation of steel divided into boiling, halftranquil, quiet.
Carbon Steel is much stronger metal.
http://www.processsystems.sandvik.com/ the answer is there
Titanium
Titanium
Eutectiod steel is 0.83% carbon within steel, Eutectiod steel is where the microstructure is completly pearlite. and no ferrite or cementite.
It heavily depends on which type of stainless steel you're referring to and what your definition of strong is. High carbon and perhaps plain carbon steels would be harder then austenite and ferritic stainless, but martensitic stainless would be harder then plain/high carbon. Austenite and ferritic stainless would be tougher and austenite would have have highest degree of corrosion resistance. I consider a steel to be "strong" if it has a balance of hardness and toughness in which case,I would say martensitic stainless steels.
poor corrosion resistance