Q&A for How to Harden Steel

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  • Question
    I heat treated a piece of carbon steel to make it less likely to wear (using its edge as a cutting surface in a wood turning application). I now want to reverse the process so I can drill and tap the metal tip. How do I do this?
    Community Answer
    Heat the area you'd like to drill just until it starts to glow red, then allow it to cool slowly. This answer was tested with a utility knife blade and it drilled through with ease.
  • Question
    How do I harden a steel hammer so that is lasts longer and is more durable?
    Community Answer
    This is not advisable. Hardening will cause it to be more brittle, which could cause the hammer to chip and cause injury.
  • Question
    Can a softly tempered piece be re-tempered harder without going through the hardening procedure again?
    Community Answer
    No. The tempering reduces the amount of martensite and thus makes the steel softer. Heating it again to a lower temperature will not introduce additional martensite. The only way to do that is to heat it until the metal de-magnetises, quench it again, and then temper to the desired hardness.
  • Question
    What is the carbon percentage of A36 steel?
    Charles Hoffmann
    Community Answer
    0.25 percent. A36 is a low carbon or mild steel, and as such cannot be hardened. It can be case-hardened, however, which just means using a chemical treatment with heat to add a thin layer of tough material around the soft steel core.
  • Question
    I'm wanting to make my own knife out of a file. Would I need to apply this method to have a better outcome?
    Community Answer
    Just use the file as is. It's already hard and tough. Recycled old files make great knives and shop tools, like three corner scrapers for deburring. You can buy file "blanks" - files formed into shape but before the teeth have been cut - that are easier to start from than an old file where you have to grind the teeth off before shaping the knife.
  • Question
    What happens if I let steel air cool?
    Community Answer
    That is normalizing the steel, which is mostly done when you have a high carbon steel in order to make it easier to shape or form. Already hardened steel can be quite a pain to work.
  • Question
    What is the perfect quenching oil?
    Community Answer
    There is no perfect oil for quenching. Used motor oil or vegetable oil works fine. Heat the oil by dipping a hot piece of metal in it; this helps the quenching process.
  • Question
    I would like to make a long screwdriver 200 mm in length. Would heat treating be necessary to increase durability of the blade after flattening the blade shape?
    Community Answer
    Yes. Watch "How It's Made: Screwdrivers". They use induction to heat only the tip.
  • Question
    What kind of chemicals should I add to the water to convert the mild steel to carbon steel?
    Community Answer
    No chemical can be added to water to convert mild steel to carbon steel. Your question is like asking "what should I add to the cream to convert my banana sundae into a strawberry sundae?"
  • Question
    Can I use hydraulic oil no. 68 for hardening?
    Community Answer
    You could use almost any oil you like. Just check for additives in the oil before quenching, because modern fluids contain some additives that may give undesired results or can be hazardous if they reach a certain temperature.
  • Question
    Can I harden lawn mower blades?
    Community Answer
    No. There is a reason they are soft. Hard and brittle make excellent projectiles.
  • Question
    I need the chemical name for that which will make the mild steel harder.
    Community Answer
    No external chemical will harden steel throughout. You either need to use a different alloy or harden and temper it as the above method describes. Quenching in oil can add some extra carbon to the steel alloy and harden the surface, but this is only useful if what you're looking to harden is a fine cutting edge. Excessive carbon or hardness can make the metal more brittle though, so be sure to find the right balance for your application.
  • Question
    Why does metal get stronger when it is heated and then cooled quickly?
    Community Answer
    It crystallizes the carbon in the steel making it harder but more brittle. It must be tempered to reduce the brittleness.
  • Question
    Is it advisable or possible to quench the heated metal in ice cold water? What would be the reaction?
    Community Answer
    Using cold water to quench is possible, but it often results in the steel cracking and shattering. The water can shrink the molocules in the metal too fast, which leads to a blade becoming brittle. Oil is a much safer option.
  • Question
    I want to harden a steel-turned component in local areas to 65 HRC using a laser instead of an all-over case hardening. What steel should I use, and what is the best quenching medium?
    Community Answer
    Use medium-thin metal (any kind) and use peanut butter. (Yes it sounds silly, but it works.)
  • Question
    What are the properties of hardened steel?
    Community Answer
    Primarily hardening is done to increase hardness, wear resistance and yield strength, while toughness and malleability are lost as the metal is further hardened.
  • Question
    How long should I leave the metal in the cooling liquid?
    Community Answer
    Leave it until it is hardened and cool enough to handle.
  • Question
    How do I harden and temper steel? How do I know what degree it's been tempered?
    Community Answer
    Heating cherry red and quenching in oil works best for hardening. You can get your parts tested at bigger weld shops of foundries.
  • Question
    How can the percentage of carbon content of something made of steel be determined?
    Dimitry Drake
    Community Answer
    Do a spark test with a shop angle grinder. Look up a chart of photos of the colors and trajectory/spark descriptions of the different alloy and carbon contents. It's easy to do and great if you are reusing or salvaging old hunks of steel you come across on old machines and in construction.
  • Question
    Which oil should I use to harden steel?
    Community Answer
    Oils with a lower flash point and free of additives are best.
  • Question
    Can I put ice in the water to cool the steel more quickly?
    Community Answer
    You shouldn't do this. Cooling the metal too quickly can make it brittle and cause it to shatter.
  • Question
    Should I use cold oil?
    Community Answer
    No. Cold oil is thicker and does not cool metal as quickly. The best temperature for the oil is around 130 degrees Fahrenheit. Heating the oil will make it thinner, heating the metal more quickly.
  • Question
    Can I temper dart tips?
    Community Answer
    If they are made of steel, I would think so. Tungsten oxidizes rapidly above 1000 degrees Celsius (1832 F).
  • Question
    Can we quench graphite?
    Community Answer
    No. Graphite is not metal-carbon composite. Quenching applies to steel and some other metals. Graphite is flat structured carbon and there is no simple process (like quenching) to get it to harder crystal structure like diamond's tetrahedrons. This requires lots of pressure and very high temperatures. The process is known as HPHT and is used to produce tiny synthetic diamonds, or to improve imperfect natural diamonds.
  • Question
    When quenching with oil, what temperature should the oil be?
    Community Answer
    The oil should be at room temperature.
  • Question
    What temperature do I bring the steel to after welding on a mini truck frame, to prevent the steel around the weld from cracking?
    Community Answer
    As a rule of thumb, it's 100 degrees for every point of carbon. Preheat and slow cool if it's an alloy frame.
  • Question
    Do regular wood screws have any carbon in them?
    Community Answer
    They are usually made from mild steel, so they don't have much carbon in them.
  • Question
    How do I make a small spring of a desired dimension from MS wire?
    Community Answer
    If it's music wire, just wrap it around a form, then put it into an oven at 400 degrees F for a half hour. Guitar strings make nice small springs.
  • Question
    How do I know if it worked?
    Community Answer
    Run a file along it and see if it cuts. Be careful to know the difference between a file skidding and cutting. You may think that it isn't hardened if it cuts, but this isn't 100% the case (though it is 95% of the time). You may just a have a much harder file than what is attainable with the steel you hardened.
  • Question
    I have a 1976 Yamaha dirt bike and the back bracket was bent about 6 inches toward the rear tire. If I heat the place where the frame bracket is bent, should I pour oil over the heated metal to cool it off?
    Community Answer
    That's what I would do. However it got bent, just do bend it in reverse to straighten it out.
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