Silly_Billy
Established Member
I read on Chris Tribe’s website that his Quangsheng No. 5 plane blade was made of hardened steel, which takes longer to hone but holds an edge longer. Does anyone know if this is generally true for Quangsheng blades?
woodbrains":jtbawiew said:Quangsheng irons are made from T10 steel, which is a water hardening steel. They are nice irons and they sharpen to a very fine edge. In the scheme if things though, they are not some new fangled exotic alloy that is a real pain to sharpen to a good degree, nor do they go on forever planing abrasive material. I think they are excellent or the price, take a super sharp edge, but probably little different than, say a vintage laminated iron. Good replacements though, about the nicest for the money.
Orraloon":3164wuf4 said:I wont get into the tech side of it but the 2 qs blades I have are OK. I also have a couple of Mujingfang wooden planes and the blades in them are also good. So far I have not had a bad Chinese blade.
matthewwh":3fuoewkf said:Quangsheng have got very good at making sure that any convexity ends up on the bevel side, leaving the flat side either flat or beneficially slightly concave. I'm not sure how they do it, but the same is true with any of the other reputable makers - Clifton, Ray Iles, Ron Hock etc.
Rorschach":3mxhietx said:matthewwh":3mxhietx said:Quangsheng have got very good at making sure that any convexity ends up on the bevel side, leaving the flat side either flat or beneficially slightly concave. I'm not sure how they do it, but the same is true with any of the other reputable makers - Clifton, Ray Iles, Ron Hock etc.
If you bevel or even partially bevel a blade one one side before heat the natural contraction of the metal during quenching will cause any warp to occur on the side opposite the bevel.
CStanford":ikszbt4l said:Rorschach":ikszbt4l said:matthewwh":ikszbt4l said:Quangsheng have got very good at making sure that any convexity ends up on the bevel side, leaving the flat side either flat or beneficially slightly concave. I'm not sure how they do it, but the same is true with any of the other reputable makers - Clifton, Ray Iles, Ron Hock etc.
If you bevel or even partially bevel a blade one one side before heat the natural contraction of the metal during quenching will cause any warp to occur on the side opposite the bevel.
I seem to recall reading somewhere that the strategy was to see which side warped concave and then grind the bevel on the other side.
matthewwh":6ps71ory said:I think what Chris is driving at is that T10 optimises slightly harder than O1 (it can be hardened to RC63 without becoming brittle compared with RC61 for O1) which gives some advantage in edge retention with no loss of edge taking ability. Clifton use O1 but then put the irons through a cryogenic heat treatment to achieve a similar end.
matthewwh":6ps71ory said:All steels can warp, the alloying elements in O1 help with that considerably (at the cost of reducing the optimum hardness), bringing production wastage due to warping down from maybe 3% for T10 to less than 1%. The irons are carefully checked by quality control at the factory so we should only ever get good ones. Needless to say, if any ever do get as far as a customer they are just exchanged for a checked replacement.
matthewwh":6ps71ory said:Quangsheng have got very good at making sure that any convexity ends up on the bevel side, leaving the flat side either flat or beneficially slightly concave. I'm not sure how they do it, but the same is true with any of the other reputable makers - Clifton, Ray Iles, Ron Hock etc.
CStanford":k3uhp3yj said:Rorschach":k3uhp3yj said:matthewwh":k3uhp3yj said:Quangsheng have got very good at making sure that any convexity ends up on the bevel side, leaving the flat side either flat or beneficially slightly concave. I'm not sure how they do it, but the same is true with any of the other reputable makers - Clifton, Ray Iles, Ron Hock etc.
If you bevel or even partially bevel a blade one one side before heat the natural contraction of the metal during quenching will cause any warp to occur on the side opposite the bevel.
I seem to recall reading somewhere that the strategy was to see which side warped concave and then grind the bevel on the other side.
CStanford":2dn0sttw said:If you wait, I believe you'd grind the right side every time as long as the person checking doesn't confuse concave with convex.
D_W":1e095h1j said:I'm guessing that the modern (US and Canadian) manufacturers like A2 so much because they can mill all of their blades out of flat stock, mill the bevels onto them, harden and temper them and then surface grind them without significant distortion. A real tight pants kind of operation.
patrickjchase":28anjxmk said:You also mentioned regrigeration in another post. What that does is to convert retained austenite to martensite and thereby improve hardness at any given temper state (and therefore toughness). Once again I don't know of any major difference between O1 and W1 in that respect - they are both known for having rather low retained austenite fractions to begin with, so the benefit is rather limited. Neither needs refrigeration to the same degree as some of the air-cooled alloys (and particularly some stainless steels), which can have ~20% retained austenite upon cooling to room temperature. For example CTS-XHP (aka PM-V11) should be refrigerated between austenitization and tempering, per its manufacturer.
matthewwh":1ea8atgb said:As I understand it cryo treatment just extends the initial martensite conversion phase after the quench and (more importantly in the case of O1) encourages the precipitation of ultra fine carbides which benefit edge retention. I believe it is multiple tempering that converts a proportion of the retained austenite with each step, which is why it is routinely done with air hardeners but not needed for oil or water hardening steels. There are of course many other factors - soak time - carbon diffusion etc. Metallurgy is, quite literally, a whole science and a whole craft, I doubt that one lifetime is enough to understand it.
matthewwh":2qfmpvg8 said:That said, it comes as no surprise that Ron is able to tease an extra point out of O1, that guy is just a magician with steel.
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