richarddownunder
Established Member
Hi there
I was rummaging through my late-dad's tool box and stumbled upon an old battered cast steel Ward 1/2 inch chisel (with an embarrassing handle made from a bit of dowel). I thought if it was decent steel, I could turn a new handle and give it to my Bro on his birthday, as a keep-sake.
Anyway, started flattening the back and grinding an edge and found it was surprisingly soft. In fact quite useless - could file a nice bevel with a blunt file. I understand Ward were a reputable make but obviously some duds got through the system!
With nothing to loose, I had a go at re-heat treating it (well, the business end 1 inch or so) - up to cherry red and quenched it in oil. Result: it has hardened it to some reasonable extent (and it might even cut something soft) but a screwdriver can still scratch it easily (if not deeply as before), and that is before tempering.
So, is oil quenching the best approach? I have used this approach with small O1 blades I have made and have had really good results but don't know anything about these old chisels. It is possible that I haven't got it quite hot enough but my little blowtorch runs out of puff at cherry red. Is there a good 'rule of thumb' hardness test that is better than a screwdriver or file.
Thanks in advance.
Richard
I was rummaging through my late-dad's tool box and stumbled upon an old battered cast steel Ward 1/2 inch chisel (with an embarrassing handle made from a bit of dowel). I thought if it was decent steel, I could turn a new handle and give it to my Bro on his birthday, as a keep-sake.
Anyway, started flattening the back and grinding an edge and found it was surprisingly soft. In fact quite useless - could file a nice bevel with a blunt file. I understand Ward were a reputable make but obviously some duds got through the system!
With nothing to loose, I had a go at re-heat treating it (well, the business end 1 inch or so) - up to cherry red and quenched it in oil. Result: it has hardened it to some reasonable extent (and it might even cut something soft) but a screwdriver can still scratch it easily (if not deeply as before), and that is before tempering.
So, is oil quenching the best approach? I have used this approach with small O1 blades I have made and have had really good results but don't know anything about these old chisels. It is possible that I haven't got it quite hot enough but my little blowtorch runs out of puff at cherry red. Is there a good 'rule of thumb' hardness test that is better than a screwdriver or file.
Thanks in advance.
Richard