Self Made Knives
Well-Known Member
Came home from work last night and fired up the oven. Followed Ken's posted Sandvik info for 14c28n and brought temp up to 1975. Wow! That's hot! I've been using O1 up to know and have never had it higher than 1500 degrees. That extra 500 degrees makes it a big difference. Blade was finished to 600 grit and at pretty much final dimensions.

I used one of BossDog's pre-made foil packages and double creased it on the open end, getting as much air out as possible. I put a small strip of paper in the package too, seemed like a lot of people think it helps. When I put it in the oven, I immediately noticed/heard it crinkling. Didn't think that much about it, until 12 minutes later when I opened oven to get it out. Foil pack had ballooned up huge, making it kind of hard to get between quench plates. I just jammed then down as hard as I could, as fast as I could, but the foil wrinkled up a lot.
I think it still quenched fast enough, even with the wrinkled foil, but I was disappointed when I opened the package. My blade was pretty dark. It was even all over, but I wasn't expecting this much heat treat patina. Maybe it was caused by the strip of paper? Actually, the strip of paper was still whole, kind of like char-cloth, so I don't think it had much oxygen present. Is this much patina normal?

I checked it with a file in one of the lightning holes, and it seems super hard, file wouldn't touch it. Did a dry ice and acetone cryo on it next. Found dry ice at a grocery store for $1.29 a pound, bought $8 worth, but probably only need about $2 of it. Oh well, the kids had fun with the rest of it! Put a thermocouple right on the blade to check temp, easily went below the -95 degree spec.


Tempered it at 400 deg for 2 hours, so I'm expecting a harness of about 60 or so. Don't have a way to check it. See anything wrong with my procedure? Is the blade supposed to come out that color? Comments and advice needed, I want to get this right for next time.
Anthony

I used one of BossDog's pre-made foil packages and double creased it on the open end, getting as much air out as possible. I put a small strip of paper in the package too, seemed like a lot of people think it helps. When I put it in the oven, I immediately noticed/heard it crinkling. Didn't think that much about it, until 12 minutes later when I opened oven to get it out. Foil pack had ballooned up huge, making it kind of hard to get between quench plates. I just jammed then down as hard as I could, as fast as I could, but the foil wrinkled up a lot.
I think it still quenched fast enough, even with the wrinkled foil, but I was disappointed when I opened the package. My blade was pretty dark. It was even all over, but I wasn't expecting this much heat treat patina. Maybe it was caused by the strip of paper? Actually, the strip of paper was still whole, kind of like char-cloth, so I don't think it had much oxygen present. Is this much patina normal?

I checked it with a file in one of the lightning holes, and it seems super hard, file wouldn't touch it. Did a dry ice and acetone cryo on it next. Found dry ice at a grocery store for $1.29 a pound, bought $8 worth, but probably only need about $2 of it. Oh well, the kids had fun with the rest of it! Put a thermocouple right on the blade to check temp, easily went below the -95 degree spec.


Tempered it at 400 deg for 2 hours, so I'm expecting a harness of about 60 or so. Don't have a way to check it. See anything wrong with my procedure? Is the blade supposed to come out that color? Comments and advice needed, I want to get this right for next time.
Anthony