304 and 316 stainless steel are the most widely used valve materials in industrial fluid systems. Many users fail to distinguish their corrosion resistance difference, resulting in premature valve rusting, pitting and penetration damage. 304 stainless steel has good oxidation resistance and is suitable for fresh water, air, oil and weak corrosive environments. It contains basic chromium alloy elements but no molybdenum. In chloride-containing water, seawater, salt spray and chemical trace corrosion conditions, 304 steel is prone to pitting corrosion and intergranular corrosion. 316 stainless steel adds molybdenum element, greatly improving resistance to chloride corrosion, seawater corrosion and acid medium erosion. 316 material is stable in salt water, coastal environment, chemical trace medium and mild acid working conditions, effectively avoiding rust and pitting failure. In practical selection, pure water and non-corrosive industrial systems can use 304 valves to save cost. Seawater, coastal projects, chemical trace corrosion, chloride medium must choose 316 stainless steel valves to ensure long service life.

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304 vs 316 Stainless Steel Valves: Corrosion Resistance & Working Condition Selection Guide
FLOWKS Team•July 17, 2026•5 min read•8 views
#Stainless Steel 304 vs 316 Valve: Material Selection Guide for Corrosive Media
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