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#1 | |
Member
Join Date: Jan 2016
Location: Chino, CA.
Posts: 219
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~ Heat treating temperatures can vary a fair bit. It depends on the carbon content of the steel, What amount by weight and what type of impurities are present, The thickness of the piece, and what degree and type of heat treating is desired. But 800°C is far too high (more than double) the maximum temperatures needed in virtually any steel tempering process. 170°C-390°C is the range at the extremes for steel tempering. ~ Plunging a heated blade into a slave to temper or case harden is in my estimation complete fantasy. I've never seen any compelling evidence for this trope of fiction having actually been a practice in any time or any place. Moreover it makes no sense. Given the investment one would have in a slave (housing, feed etc.) This would be economically not viable. I've also heard that this would be done with criminals who were condemned to die. But even then it makes no sense. A blade is effectively not sharpened at the point of heat treatment. And while very hot, it's not hot enough to make it's passage through flesh any easier for being not sharpened. Plunging a blade into a person at this point would be damn near impossible. That's not to say that metal workers have not used a variety of pasty concoctions to case harden blades (Though this is mostly done by blacksmiths for things like files and rasps). Some recipes of which may include crushed bone, shell, minerals, livestock blood, and even animal urine. Though the efficacy of these are questionable at best. Largely because we can't test them. As most metal workers who engaged in any type of heat treatment if long enough in the game had such a paste, powder, or fluid. But kept the majority of it's ingredients (at least) a secret. But also because such things are more akin to alchemy than chemistry. |
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#2 |
Member
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Room 101, Glos. UK
Posts: 4,224
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You are again confusing heat treatment's HARDENING phase with tempering.
Hardening is done from the critical temperature where the steel is no longer magnetic, it varies on the steel composition a bit, 800 is just an approximation. Tempering is indeed done at a much lower temperature in the range you mentioned to relieve brittleness and give a softer but tougher structure as a final phase. Using the term 'Tempering' to cover both phases is inaccurate. Differential heat treating where a blade is hardened at the edge and self tempered at the spine is a technique used by some experienced bladesmiths mostly with varying results. The live slave thing is of course a myth, but corpses would be readily available. |
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#3 |
Member
Join Date: Jan 2016
Location: Chino, CA.
Posts: 219
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Sorry I actually just misread what you wrote regarding hardening vs. tempering.
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#4 |
EAAF Staff
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Louisville, KY
Posts: 7,280
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The blade seemed to be moderately hard but not brittle. After I did some more research and read your comments here, I slowly and carefully bent the steel blade back into straight form without snapping it.
So I did not need to reheat but will keep this as a second option should I get into a similar situation. Again many thanks to all of you for your input. The first picture is how I got the blade which was roughly 20 degrees off center. The second picture is after I worked on it, which is now roughly straight. |
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#5 |
EAAF Staff
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Louisville, KY
Posts: 7,280
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I was debating on brazing the crack with silver, but have decided to leave it as is for now. The blade is from a cut down Scottish or English sword.
For more pictures, here is the thread: http://www.vikingsword.com/vb/showthread.php?t=24495 |
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