Sean Jones
Well-Known Member
I have a small paint can forge that I've been attempting to get some 1084 to harden correctly without success. Here's my procedure so far.
First forge attempt.
1. Brought the forge up to about 1450 (I do have a temperature probe, though I don't know how accurate it is in such a primitive forge)
2. I took a piece of mild steel and heated cherry red and dropped in the canola oil to bring the oil temperature up.
3. After that the forge would only come back up to about 1350 or so. Perhaps I should have waited longer to see if it would come up higher?
4. I decided to go ahead and heat treat with a magnet and color. When the blade was about red-orange I checked for non-magnetic, which it was.
5. I then returned the blade to the forge for about five minutes and then put in the canola oil tip down for roughly a minute.
6. After heat treating 3 1084 blades this way I put them in our kitchen oven for tempering. Set the oven to 425 degrees for the first two hours, and 390 for the second two hours. They didn't change color coming out of the oven.
7. I then ground any possible surface junk off and tested the blade surfaces with a file. All three showed scratches from the file.
So I heat treated all three blades again. The only difference the second time was I tempered the blades in my toaster oven. I tested the toaster oven with my temperature probe and it seemed pretty accurate. I threw in two fire bricks and set my blades on the fire bricks. Then I set the oven for 400 degrees for two hours, let them cool to room temperature and then another two hours at 400 degrees. The blades had a nice wheat color and some purple when I took them out.
Same result. All three show scratches from my file. I tested a piece of AEB-L heat treated to RC of 62 with the file to make sure I was doing the file test correctly and it didn't scratch at all.
Any ideas on what I'm doing wrong? I know I need a better forge and it's in the works. Do I need to normalize? Two of the blades are from the New Jersey Baron and the third is from Alpha Knife supply. I don't see any differences between them.
First forge attempt.
1. Brought the forge up to about 1450 (I do have a temperature probe, though I don't know how accurate it is in such a primitive forge)
2. I took a piece of mild steel and heated cherry red and dropped in the canola oil to bring the oil temperature up.
3. After that the forge would only come back up to about 1350 or so. Perhaps I should have waited longer to see if it would come up higher?
4. I decided to go ahead and heat treat with a magnet and color. When the blade was about red-orange I checked for non-magnetic, which it was.
5. I then returned the blade to the forge for about five minutes and then put in the canola oil tip down for roughly a minute.
6. After heat treating 3 1084 blades this way I put them in our kitchen oven for tempering. Set the oven to 425 degrees for the first two hours, and 390 for the second two hours. They didn't change color coming out of the oven.
7. I then ground any possible surface junk off and tested the blade surfaces with a file. All three showed scratches from the file.
So I heat treated all three blades again. The only difference the second time was I tempered the blades in my toaster oven. I tested the toaster oven with my temperature probe and it seemed pretty accurate. I threw in two fire bricks and set my blades on the fire bricks. Then I set the oven for 400 degrees for two hours, let them cool to room temperature and then another two hours at 400 degrees. The blades had a nice wheat color and some purple when I took them out.
Same result. All three show scratches from my file. I tested a piece of AEB-L heat treated to RC of 62 with the file to make sure I was doing the file test correctly and it didn't scratch at all.
Any ideas on what I'm doing wrong? I know I need a better forge and it's in the works. Do I need to normalize? Two of the blades are from the New Jersey Baron and the third is from Alpha Knife supply. I don't see any differences between them.