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Thread: how can a average joe "heat treat" small parts?

  1. #21
    Boolit Buddy Geppetto's Avatar
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    One other consideration, "hot rolled" is a process, not a material designation. You can buy hot rolled 4140, or you can buy hot rolled 1008. They are wildly different steels in the long run. If you made a propane forge, you could heat treat that steel, but if its a mild steel such as 1020 or A36, you won't get much hardness without carburizing, as stated above.

    You could also consider an appropriate piece of brass or bronze for the wear areas or possibly some cast iron of some time if you need something that will last longer than a polymer. Otherwise some teflon (PTFE) might treat you well for a wear situation.

  2. #22
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    Quote Originally Posted by cwheel View Post
    Are these are the parts you had on this forum asking if a machinist could make them for you ?? If so, and you want to harden without a furnace or anything special, those parts need to start off being made of W1 or O1 steel. W1 or O1 steel isn't cheap. Steel in that size isn't hard to come by though, try MSC supply, most likely they will have it in stock. Then, after machining, someone with a oxy/acet torch set with a heating tip ( #6 or 8 mfa ) can bring the temp up to a point where the part isn't magnetic anymore and quench. W1 quench in water, O1 quench in oil. Parts that big will need a very even heat as to not warp the parts. After a rapid quench the first time, parts need to be polished to see the color, heat to a straw brown and let air cool. All of this also depends on what these parts intended use is, if this heat treating would be suitable for your application. If you want more than this it's time to send the parts out to a pro and it isn't going to be cheap. If your " hot rolled steel " is 1018 there isn't much you are going to do with it at home.
    Chris


    I have tried the oxy/acet torch heating approach in the past for large/long stuff that would not fit in my furnace. Things, especially long things, tend to warp severly when heated unevenly with a torch. You just cannot get the heat spread over the entire length well enough AND deep enough to bring the entire item gradually up to "glowing" heat, and the result was a 10" piece of 3/4x2" steel that had a 1/2" cruve in it when quenched in oil.

    It really needs to be brought up COMPLETELY to the soak temp recommended for the grade of material being treated. AND then soaked at that temp for XX minutes to insure the internal temp reaches the necessary levels.

    Heat treating of teeny weeny little gun parts and the such with a torch or home brew tin can oven is no big deal for the general joe-garage-shop individual, but large things like the OP is discussing are a "horse of a different color".

    bangerjim

  3. #23
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  4. #24
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    You won't do nothing with 1018 but waste your time, you won't even p1ss it off.

    Next time you want to manufacture a bit of machinery, buy some machineable heat treatable steel.
    Got a .22 .30 .32 .357 .38 .40 .41 .44 .45 .480 or .500 S&W cylinder that needs throats honed? 9mm, 10mm/40S&W, 45 ACP pistol barrel that won't "plunk" your handloads? 480 Ruger or 475 Linebaugh cylinder that needs the "step" reamed to 6° 30min chamfer? Click here to send me a PM You can also find me on Facebook Click Here.

  5. #25
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    Depending on what type of wear surface you need industrial hard chrome plating MAY work.

  6. #26
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    If the load on these rails is going to be too great for materials like Delrin and requires something with greater hardness, tensile strength or rigidity, you might try Aluminum Bronze. An Aluminum Bronze alloy of at least 8% aluminum will have good strength and hardness while still having a low coefficient of friction.

    Aluminum bronze has reasonably good machinability and is widely used for bushings in outdoor and even in salt water environments. We used it extensively for bushings in rotating assemblies on the rides at Universal Studios.

    smokeywolf
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  7. #27
    Boolit Master

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    Another easier option if you want to use steel MIGHT be 4140HT (4140 pre-hard) which is 4140 alloy prehardened to about 28 to 32 Rc, still machinable but has very good wear characteristics due to not only the hardness but also the alloy itself.

    Try MSC or SpeedyMetals for a source of 4140 Pre-Hard.

    Also while the recommendation for Kasenit for hardening small parts is common unfortunately the Kasenit itself is not, it has been out of production for about 4 years now and unless you can find someone with a supply the stuff is simply not to be found anymore. Cherry red is easily found however and seems to work fairly good but whether or not it's as good as Kasenit doesn't matter much since it's the only thing left. I have heard there is a "new" Kasenit on the market without the cyanide but a quick search didn't find any, I suppose even if there is it's probably no different than the Cherry Red product.
    Last edited by oldred; 02-27-2015 at 08:17 AM.

  8. #28
    Boolit Master

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    Lot's of unknowns here, how much pressure rides against these things (heavy, light?) what type of material will it be mated to, etc? How about a brief description of what these things are and how they will be used, could it be that maybe you thinking over-kill here? No point in spending the money on hardening or surface hardening if it's really not necessary.

  9. #29
    Boolit Master
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    Quote Originally Posted by oldred View Post
    Lot's of unknowns here, how much pressure rides against these things (heavy, light?) what type of material will it be mated to, etc? How about a brief description of what these things are and how they will be used, could it be that maybe you thinking over-kill here? No point in spending the money on hardening or surface hardening if it's really not necessary.
    Big +1 on that.
    If it must remain under wraps just try it without treatment and see how it works.
    If it doesn't work out you may need better materials and heat treatment.
    I bet the professor could help and keep a secret.
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  10. #30
    Boolit Grand Master

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    3/4" X 1 1/2" X 7" your going to see twist and bow heating with a tourch and more so if not quenched properly. Allo of the steel determines heat and procedure to harden completly and fully. Also if its not a stress relieved steel its going to warp and twist more from internal stress also. Some alloies require a longer soak time at temp to harden. Another issue on parts this size is enough quench Oil or water to fully sbmerse and remove the heat with out "boiling" off. If youve never seen hot steel quenched it will scare the bejeebers out of you. Alot of smoke and some flame with oil and stem with water. There has to be enough volumne to the quench to absorb all the heat from the part with out reaching the flash point of the oil. Another is with out atmosheric controls scale and burning are issues. At work the parts in the old furnaces were wrapped and packed before heating to keep oxegon away. Still got some scale. the new oven was controlled atmosphere and those parts came out a silver gray. You might get away with a case hardening type of hardness. Pack part in metal box charcoal bone and leather heat to burn off and quench. Case hardening will give a .010 - .060 thick hard surface, this is what you get from the kassenite or Cherry red. A case hardening may be more doable in the home enviroment for you.

  11. #31
    Boolit Master

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    Average Joes can do anything with the right gear.
    you must have the proper steel to begin with, high carbon steel is a great place to start, drill rod is nice, recycled metal like lawmower blades and cutters are wicked too.
    I make two or more pieces, heat treating is hard on metal, be prepared.for failure.
    Heat to cherry red, quench in 80W90 or used engine oil.
    temper on a hot plate or stove. On medium high heat, heat part to blue gray then turn off element and wait till cool. Test you part and polish to uncover any cracks or flaws that will make you look stupid later.
    any questions please ask.




    there was agood write up about this.on the Brownells website
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  12. #32
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    The best way to DIY heat treat parts the size that you describe is in a coal forge. You're going to need a pretty big one.
    At the end of the day, it's not worth it. It's cheap enough to send the parts out to have a professional do it.
    These guys are local to me, but I think everybody should know about them. They charge me about $75 to heat treat custom dies and similar parts as I have need of them. Their ovens are totally atmospherically controlled, and the parts come out straight and true, not warped at all, and they return the parts with a tag stating what the final hardness was.
    They do quite a bit of HT for Wilson Combat and other firearms manufacturers but their bread and butter is large runs of industrial parts.
    http://www.colemanheattreating.com/

    I think if you do the math, you'll find you're money ahead to use a company like this.
    Precision in the wrong place is only a placebo.

  13. #33
    Boolit Master


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    yes---build a forge---Attachment 132386 add a support,turkey fryer frame works good.Hair dryer for blower.
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  14. #34
    Boolit Master ohland's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by mozeppa View Post
    next, those 2 pieces are to be rails ...sort of...that a moving shuttle will ride between them...i thought with a lot of grease and hardened they wouldn't wear a great deal. grind and polish the bearing surfaces and may still some grease just may be the ticket.
    I relish the thought of being ambiguous.

    Ever consider linear shafting? You can get stuff in all sorts of diameters, lengths, and hardness.

    Check ebuy or other sites. McMaster, Grainger, MSC....

    http://www.thomsonlinear.com/website...s/shafting.php
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  15. #35
    Boolit Master BigEyeBob's Avatar
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    Do asearch on You Tube for "gas bottle forge" theres a couple of good vids showing how to make a gas heated forging oven from a LPG bottle

  16. #36
    Boolit Buddy
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    Holy dead cow(said in a Harry Caray voice). Some of you are way over complicating things and some are plain wrong.

    If you want to heat treat small mild steel (aka 1018/a36) you need to add carbon. (Hot/cold rolled is a process not a type of steel) The cheap way for a home shop is charcoal pack case hardening. Old guns where typically made with mild steel and packed with charcoal, bone meal, and eye of newt. Place in a stove or furnace and then dumped in water with bubbles coming up. The bone meal, eye of newt and air bubbles are unnessessary if you don't care about the fancy colors/patterns.

    Crush hardwood charcoal into a powder. Do not use briquettes for the pack! Small parts can be placed in a small iron(not galvanized pipe capped at both ends with a small hole drilled(as to not make a bomb. Pack the part and powdered charcoal in the pipe and make sure the part is well centered and not touching the side. Kasinite(not sold any more) or Cherry red(kasinite alter ego) can be used in this manner as well.

    I then place the pipe( or a steel box for bigger parts) into the wood stove. I keep the pipe on top of the coals and keep it from being buried in ash. The stove should be going a fair clip. In the summer I use a charcoal barbecue grill and place the pipe down in the briquettes. Small thin parts are good for a couple of hours and larger parts may take 6 or more. Tongs are used to remove pipe and water pump pliers remove hot cap(they should have been just hand tightened) and the whole mess is quickly dumped into cold water. The surface is now hard and the core soft and tough(unless you left it in to long). If you want to temper it an electric baking oven can do so. There are time temp charts available, and part is dumped into cold water again to stop tempering process.

  17. #37
    Boolit Master detox's Avatar
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    PTG's instructions for heat treating one of their die bodies:

    "Die body is made of the same material as used by RCBS and other manufacturers. Heat treating is generally not necessary as the die body will last a long time after cutting to the correct dimensions, as the body will then only have contact from the brass cartridge cases. However, if heat treating is desired, heat to 1650 - 1700 degrees F and then allow to cool slowly for 3 to 6 hours."

    I guess you bury hot part in dry sand letting it cool slowly?
    Last edited by detox; 03-17-2015 at 11:33 PM.

  18. #38
    Boolit Grand Master



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    Not sure why PTG is stating a slow cool of 3 to 6 hours. To do that you would just leave it in the HToven and turn the oven off. The lack of a quench indicates they are using some type of Air-hardening tool steel.

  19. #39
    Boolit Buddy
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    I looked up the ptg die blanks. They are 4140. 4140 requires a quench in oil and then a tempering process. The description you listed (it is the same description on the website) is wrong or a typo. That process is however almost verbatim for stress relieving 4140 not hardening it. 4140 is not a good home heat treat metal unless you consider owning a good electric heat treat oven within the realm of home shop(some guys do however). Also the description leaves out the most critical step of placing the part in a stainless steel foil pouch with a piece of paper(when it burns it consumes the oxygen)

    o1 and w1 a long with case hardening is really the only steels that should be attempted in a home shop with minimal equipment. Even the large tool room where I work sends out 4140 to be hardened (we have the equipment) as it's not cost effective to devote the time/man power to do small batches.

  20. #40
    Boolit Master detox's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by M-Tecs View Post
    Not sure why PTG is stating a slow cool of 3 to 6 hours. To do that you would just leave it in the HToven and turn the oven off. The lack of a quench indicates they are using some type of Air-hardening tool steel.
    Midways site lists steel as 4140 chrome moly steel

    http://www.midwayusa.com/product/118...-7-8-14-thread




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