I'm looking for a source for hardened cutting blades at a reasonable price. I read a post on here that someone was paying $2.00 a foot but cant find it again. That seems to good to be true from the prices I've seen.
john_bud said:You mean the bolt on edge for the FEL bucket?
If so, you ain't gonna find anything for $2 a foot. Not even hotdogs are that cheap!
Matt_Jr said:Not quite an exact scientific approach, but I've modified stuff at work by heating it up with a torch and dropping it in cold water. You can use oil too. I like water. Any how the process forces the steel to trap the carbon and other stuff in the steel between the molecules to make it harder. I don't know how well this works on all types of steel but I've been doin' it for years. I know they do this to make swords too. Picture below comes from
Metalsmith V 21.3 Quenching Steel by Pete Stanaitis
exiled said:I thought tempering steel required you to lower the tempture at a slow rate. If you just drop the hot steel into water and "DROP" the tempture you would have weaked the steel as apposed to harded it. I've read thats why they use a type of oil. It does'nt drop the temp and some of the oil is trapped in the pores and for a short time fights off oxidation.
excelagator said:Yes Tempering is cooling it slowly making it less brittle. Heat-treating is quenching it aka droping in water like Matt posted. If I am wrong correct me??
Dan
shinnlinger said:I hada "cheap redneck" way to do this thought....
OLd leaf springs(fairly high carbon) thrown in a good brush fire and heated to red hot and then quickly removed (you will need tongs) and clamped to a peice of angle or the edge of your bucket to flatten it. two sections of leave would proabably be long enough. Ideally you would heat it once and let it air cool to soften it and then drill your mounting holes and then do it again after it is flattend and holed but then throw it in a 55 gallon drum of water to cool imidiatlky after removing it the second time.