The plasticity mechanisms of press hardening steel with a fully lath martensite microstructure were examined experimentally by strain rate sensitivity measurements, repeated relaxation tests and internal friction measurements. The analysis of relaxation tests suggests that the micro-plasticity could be due to the motion of mobile non-screw dislocations, based on mobile dislocation exhaustion observed in the micro-plastic range. In the macro-plastic range, the plasticity is thought to be due to the generation of mobile screw dislocations. The solute carbon-dislocation interaction results in a negative strain rate sensitivity and a Snoek-Koster-Ke peak in the internal friction spectrum of the lath martensitic press hardening steel. The magnit...