Again, from my personal testing (you mileage WILL vary!) You may want to test aeration and potentially turn off aeration at time of quench. This is for you to find the happy place for you parts, your crucible stack, your pack chemistry, etc. Aerate for a LONG time, the whole time your heat cycling, preheating, etc. Then maybe turn down or off. You must test this with samples to get the outcome your after. IN ANY CASE THE HARDNESS WILL NOT BE ALTERED, it will be as hard as it could be for the soak/quench cycle used. I found that BIG violent bubbles make AMAZING color, but spotty. Dollops of color in large flanks of tans and straws. Electric blues, like stunning blues, but only in dollops. The bubbles explode like bombs on the char pack breaking it up, creating voids. These avoids make for pockets of unprotected material that can harden in gaseous dry environments. Smaller bubbles, the opposite. No bubbles, I noticed more uniformity in color (total coverage) or vice versa, lack of color, depending on the rate at which the char dispersed (char stack). My parts are heavy and FALL FREE from the char pack frequently. If I had the ability to have Copious CHAR avail so that the material couldn't break free, the environment will change dramatically and Ill have to alter my aeration, quench temp, etc. I built a test case to hold a test part. I sent a Winchester SG action into the water with violent bubbles at normal temps, 100% char contact was maintained all the way to the bottom of tank. It was completely nearly one dark color (melanism)! Same temp as If I was going after mostly straw with dollops of electric blues. This for me proved the points above, contact at quench and how intimate that is maintained is what develops color, or deletes it. Ive tried them all, I like small bubbles and violent bubbles for the crucible I have been using. Again those bubbles agitate and cavitate the payload of parts and char and cause char to dislodge from the material at quench. That LIMITS the intimate bond and thus limits the color formation. Its a nasty viscous circle. If you skimp on char like I do due to kiln internal dimensions and crucible shape, then you may have issues with violent bubbles disrupting the bond easier than say a 3x pack (way overpacked) where the material CANT escape from the bond with char pack at water contact. The aeration saturates the water with gases but also disturbs (if bubbling at quench in any form) the char pack contact at quench.
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