Brandlin":1zx9ragz said:
Blueing is a process of oxidising the outer layer of the steel, to Fe3O4 to prevent it from forming rust Fe2O3
You need around 150C (a quick google suggest 135-155C)
the depth and consistency of the colour is determined by the availability of the Potassium Nitrate but more critically by the consistency of the temperature.
I've blue'd small things but never part of a larger thing like a casting. and it's been many many years. I suspect that heat disipation is going to be your biggest challenge in blueing part of a casting. I figure you'll need to heat the whole casting and accurately apply the Potassium Nitrate as a mask? In my limited experience its not a precision process.
Thank you - that is very helpful.
It's a #73 shoulder plane. I bought one in need of a lot of resto and cleaned it up, but that was largely polishing rust off. It's on its way to Steve Maskery at the moment, who picks up the baton from me of completing it. The work needed on that one is to do with the mechanics rather than appearance though (up to him if he wants to blue bits).
I've since been given a much nicer #73 as a delightful and unexpected Christmas present. It too needs a little TLC (but hardly anything). But I was surprised to find that on the second one, the two adjustment wheels, the iron extension, and the one that causes the handle to clamp down, and the penny dropped about the recesses in the casting: they were originally blued too (well, black really).
I'm fairly certain that copies of Preston/Record original shoulder plane designs by modern makers have those recesses blued (well, chemically blackened somehow).
So the target bits are small-ish recesses that can be kept horizontal, and the temperature is achievable in the domestic oven (on a day when "nobody's looking", that is).
Many, many years ago, as a teenager I worked in a light engineering factory as a holiday job. Our toolmaker used to blue things in an electric oven, so I think it can be done fairly easily.
Your info was very helpful.
E.