Hello Victoroni,
It all depends on what you are looking for in a definition, what knifemakers refer to as “normalizing” and what the steel industry has developed as the heat treatment known as normalizing. Knifemakers will refer to any number of heats, from 1800°F + down to less than 1400°F as “normalizing”, but it would be more accurate to describe most of these treatments as “thermal cycles” used for grain refinement, stress relief, or annealing effects. Proper normalizing is a homogenizing process that involves heating to full solution, which places it above most other heat treatments in temperature. To homogenize the internal structures and phases of the steel it is necessary to put both the ferrite (iron), and carbide into solution. This, in turn, will allow the total reorganization of the grain framework on recrystallization. So, both the carbide condition and the grains are completely reset in normalizing. This does not necessarily result in finer grain, but instead a more uniform grain size.
Normalizing is most often employed to restore normalcy to a piece of steel that has been heavily deformed, such as in forging operations. The process of forging results in an accumulation of strain defects within the crystalline lattice of the steel, but could also result in uneven carbide segregations due to the localized introduced energy of the hammer or the cooling between it and the anvil. These defects could lead to distortion later on, but the larger, segregated, carbides will also complicate later heat treatments and effect edge fineness and stability.
The lowest actual normalizing temperatures would be those for the simplest carbon steel, and even these begin at around 1550°F and go up from there. So, to normalize, you get it hot, but the real key is that the steel must be heated evenly and cooled evenly. And by definition the cooling must be in still air. So you heat the steel to a temperature, and time, which will give you full solution and then remove it from the heat and allow it to cool in still air, that is normalizing.
About soaking- soaking is STANDARD practice in every steel industry, even with carbon steels. I know my friend Ed is very passionate about this, and so I normally simply refrain from countering how he prefers for do things. But I feel his passion has gotten the best of him enough this time that an alternate viewpoint is necessary to avoid a great disservice to our community. I have been at this for close to 40 years, I have put more hours in looking at soaked steel in a laboratory than many makers have ever heating it, and I cannot say that I have seen anything, ever, to support the idea that soaking any steel will totally wreck it, or that a very standard, and proven, practice is misinformation.
Once again Ed is passionate about this issue and has probably had one of those days where he has lost patience with a practice he doesn't use in his shop. I believe Ed and I are on the same page that soaking is necessary in alloy steels, and I will concede that it is not necessary in simple carbon steels, but that is a far cry from totally wrecking it. Other than decarburization, there is nothing that could result from an extended soak in carbon steel that could not be quickly undone. I am a bladesmith, but I am also a man of science, so I would need some solid data to make me rethink all that I, and the rest of steel-working world, observe daily. I will be happy to provide micrographs of 10XX steels soaked everywhere from 1 minute out to 30 minutes, and explain, in detail what they show, as I have hard drives full of them. Misinformation is a tricky thing, and I found taking on what I see as misinformation even trickier, solid data is very important.
For what it is worth, normalizing can be so powerful a tool that with careful normalizing one can shorten and almost eliminate the need for soaking even in some alloy steels. In the end it is all just really cool.