Back when I first started CCH, I did a LOT of experimenting. I took 1018 steel plates and surface ground them, so that they were perfectly flat and a known size. CCH them then measured for flatness, size and of course colors.
I experimented for about a year, sometimes as many as three drops a day: different temps, different bone to wood ratios, different quench temps, different soak times etc.
I also took a couple of frames and CCH them to destruction, measuring after each quench, and just seeing how many they would take before they were no good. One I annealed before each CCH cycle, the other I did not.
I bought every pre 1920 book on case hardening that I could find, I now actually have quite a substantial library .
So quite a few experiments under my belt before I started offering this service to the general public.
As to blocking, stainless steel works quite well, fairly easily to machine, and holds up exceedingly well.
But as I stated earlier, I generally don’t use blocking a whole lot any more, Yes I’ll still use blocking in the bolt rails of lever guns, and sometimes the ears of lower tangs, but for the most part, If you don’t get too crazy with soak temps, parts are properly annealed first, arrange the parts so that the thicker parts hit the quench first, there is really not a whole lot of metal movement. And if the parts are going to move, they will move with or without blocking i.e.. once you take the blocking out the metal will spring.
V/R
Mike
Mike Hunter
Hunter Restorations
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