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"Jim Wilkins" <muratlanne@gmail.com> writes:A soaking heat for several hours followed by a sloooowwww cooling has worked for me in the past . Small parts can be buried in sand or ashes, bigger stuff stays in the stove .
"Jim Wilkins" wrote in message news:vu44rs$vrlu$1@dont-email.me...I once made a (finger) ring from pattern-welded mild steel and a piece
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I will soon try making a tool from a scrap of broken rock drill pipe, and
see how easy to saw and turn it is.
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It wears an HSS bit dull in a few minutes unless the lathe is in back gear.
Annealing or tempering in the wood stove to at least 600F when I removed it
from the tin can after the fire died down seems to have helped tool bit
life.
of VW Beetle front suspension torsion spring. File glided off of it
as if it were glass. Put it in the coal of the wood range and left it
overnight as the fire died. Next day, it filed nicely.
Those yard-long VW spring leaves can be clamped in the vise and bent
180 and will violently spring back. Heated to red in the forge and
cooled in air on the bench, can easily be snapped of by hand with a
very few degrees of bend. Glassy-hard. Air-hardening alloy.
So, good lo-tech annealing trick. Dunno about rock drill pipe, though.
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