Cheshirechappie":2ke65bvp said:
I've never had a chisel that short, but I'd imagine the hardness doesn't suddenly give out,
It might - if the tool is not totally immersed, but instead mostly dipped in, then there can be a line of hardened steel in the tank, and the part outside (usually the tang) not have any martensite formed. This is a common approach, as total immersion brings it's own complications.
The common way of tempering is to bake the whole tool in the oven, so that part not dunked in the hardening will exhibit quite a sharp step in hardness.
In some cases, the tang is deliberately tempered softer, via a torch. If that's done, then it's likely that this will leave a gradient in the hardness. In most of the files I buy [0], I can see evidence of this. However, files are generally left harder, thus the point tempering of the tang is more important. I can't relate that to socketed chisels through.
That said:
Cheshirechappie":2ke65bvp said:
If you do have a very short chisel that won't hold an edge, maybe it's time to buy a new one!
full agreement there - empiricism over theory on that one any day.
[0] I did a count, and appear to have 14 files (not including diamond and needle files … is this the early signs of a problem developing?)