OK OK OK
You'se all gotta' bear with me, I'm NOT a metallurgist and anything I do know about treating steels goes back to gunsmithing school and "carbon steels" YES I've made knives and scrapers and springs and such, from carbon steel. YES, I know a liddle about heating/quenching/drawing back to color. I can and have made chisels, punches and knives. Even made a filet knife from a file and got it to flex and to hold an edge, 30yrs ago, but NO-NO-NO!!!! I don't know about some of these "modern" alloys. I recently spoke to someone who useta' be on this board and they talked of "most steels nowadays" being "air hardening."
AS I UNDERSTAND IT you
harden this PTG 4140 alloy by bringing it to temp, soaking, and letting cool in the foil, in the furnace for 3-6 hrs.
I'm making some superlative dies from PTG blanks.
I WILL NOT use un-hardened dies.
I called Whidden yesterday, they'll attempt to please me for just under 300.00 a pop, they claim they can do it and maybe they can but currently they fit their dies differently than I do.
Neil Jones makes me happy, but timing is always a problem.
Meloniting has other problems.
My question is, "DO YOU
harden these dies as described? I will not quench them. All the dies I've had done in past were "vacuum hardened" and as I learn more I'm realizing that quite possibly this means "thrown into the fire in a SS bag."
Has anyone actually DONE THIS?
al