John Taylor wrote on Feb 15
th, 2018 at 11:51pm:
I have installed two replacement breach blocks in Hepburns and had both color cased. They don't need to be hard all the way through but should have a case hard. The action will work much smoother if the parts are case hardened.
thank you John>
I looked up some specs on 8620 and found this. Would like opinions from the experianced smiths here.
Cool From Carburizing Temperature in Carburizing Box, Reheat to Above Upper Critical Temperature of Core, Quench.
This treatment is applied by allowing the piece to cool in the box to room temperature from the carburizing temperature of 1700F (925C) The piece is then reheated to above 1535F (835C) and quenched in oil. The core will be refined and exhibit maximum strength and hardness. The case will be hardened and somewhat coarsened.
3. Cool From Carburizing Temperature In Carburizing Box, Reheat Only To Above Lower Critical Temperature of the Case, Quench.
This treatment is applied by allowing the piece to cool in the box from the carburizing temperature of 1700F (925C). The piece is then reheated to above 1350F (730C) and quenched in oil to harden and refine the case. The core will be unrefined, soft and machineable and the case will be hardened.
4. Cool From Carburizing Temperature in Carburizing Box. Reheat to Above Upper Critical Temperature of the Core, Quench. Again Reheat Above Lower Critical Temperature of the Case, Quench.
This treatment is applied by allowing the piece to cool in the box from the carburizing temperature of 1700F (925C). The piece is then reheated to above 1535F (835C) and oil quenched in oil to refine the core. The piece is again reheated to 1350F (730C) and oil quenched to refine the case. Thus, this double heating and quenching method refines both the case and core. The refined core will be soft and machineable with maximum toughness and resistance to impact. The refined case will be hardened for wear and resistance.