For sure, you can easily garantee quality of a steel by "over buying" a specification for the application.
If you know the performance requirments of your designs & do a little shoping you can do much better.
For fun, look up the ANSI standards for drive shafts somtime :wink:
I'll highlight a few things you should consider for your app.
mcmaster part # =8893K45
qyt = Each
In stock for
$8.53
More About Steel Alloys
*Drill Quantity = Individual Drills
*Drill Bit Style = Drill Blanks and Rods
*Drill Rod Type = Precision Ground
*Drill Bit Composition = Grade O-1 Oil-Hardening Tool Steel
*Surface Treatment = Precision-Ground
*Overall Length = 36"
*Length Tolerance = +1/4"
*Diameter = 1/2"
*Diameter Tolerance = ±.001"
*Specifications Met = American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM)
*ASTM Specification = ASTM A681
*Temper/Condition = Annealed
*Hardness = Rockwell B89-B110
*Maximum Attainable Hardness = Rockwell C57-C62
*Yield Strength = 50,000 to 99,000 psi
I read above where you intend to weld to these shafts? That would negate the money spent for a case harden shaft..(since welding will destroy any consistancy of the atributes that warrented the increased cost initialy.)