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Upgrade NowSmoked a ground hog last night. You gotta love hollow points.
How did you temper the "wing"?The last set I bought I tempered the wing and they have been on for 3 seasons now
I heated the wing to almost a glowing color, then quenched it in oil. That made it harder, but not brittle. Which keeps the sand and dirty from wearing it off. Search "knife spine tempering" on you tube, and you'll get a good grasp on how to do it. My neighbor is a black Smith, so he walked me through it.How did you temper the "wing"
Unless you have a press-quench, you'll warp / bow the crap out of the blade during quench...do not do the whole thing.Interesting. We have a heat treat oven here at work. Do you suppose I could put the whole blade in and treat it that way?
If not I can take a torch to it and try it your way. When quenching it in oil does it splatter and make a mess?
I wouldn't do the whole blade, because if you hit something, it may shatter instead of bending, as well as warping it like PA said. If you get it to hot, I'm sure the oil quench will spit a bit at ya. We also warmed the oil to around 100° f, I'm not sure what that does, but my neighbor said to do it, so I did. He was also pretty insistent on not getting much heat anywhere near the cutting edge to keep from removing the temper from it. So I made a jig that let the cutting edge in water while I heated the lift wing. Seemed to work.Interesting. We have a heat treat oven here at work. Do you suppose I could put the whole blade in and treat it that way?
If not I can take a torch to it and try it your way. When quenching it in oil does it splatter and make a mess?
What happens when you get it too hot is that you run the risk of austenitizing it, therefore when you quench it in oil you'll be at max hardness and without reheating it to the proper tempering temperature the material will be brittle and will shatter when it strikes something. The edge, being thinnest wouldn't take much to heat to austenitizing temp...I wouldn't do the whole blade, because if you hit something, it may shatter instead of bending, as well as warping it like PA said. If you get it to hot, I'm sure the oil quench will spit a bit at ya. We also warmed the oil to around 100° f, I'm not sure what that does, but my neighbor said to do it, so I did. He was also pretty insistent on not getting much heat anywhere near the cutting edge to keep from removing the temper from it. So I made a jig that let the cutting edge in water while I heated the lift wing. Seemed to work.
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