[TheForge] Rust inhibitor
Peter Fels And Phoebe Palmer
artgawk at thegrid.net
Sat Nov 27 23:14:05 EST 2004
I once talked to an old guy who'd worked in a spring fabricating place
. He said that for tempering , they'd heat the spring till the quench
oil flashed, several times. The flash point of whatever oil they were
using was close enough to be the temper temperature to call it
right.....Pete F
Chuck Robinson wrote:
>The use of those organic materials is because they are reduced to pure
>carbon in an inert environment. The case hardening process took many hours
>to get a few thousandths penetration of the iron surface. Nothing that you
>would see at a lower temperature and certainly not with a quick pass of the
>horn in an oxidizing environment.
>
>Olive oil is used for quenching steel. It is a good quenching medium because
>the hot oil smells better than petroleum and other types of quenchants and
>the fumes are less harmful to breath.
>I use it at about 180-200 F. It is heated to reduce the oil's viscosity
>because it cools faster at that viscosity.
>If you bring it to the boiling point you will probably reach the oil's to
>its flash point when you stick in the hot billet.
>Chuck
>--- Original Message -----
>From: "Michael H. Murphy" <blacksmith at comcast.net>
>To: "'Sponsored by ABANA'" <theforge at mailman.qth.net>
>Sent: Saturday, November 27, 2004 6:37 PM
>Subject: RE: [TheForge] Rust inhibitor
>
>
>I've run into that process in a number of historical texts. Also other
>types of horn, as well as leather, charcoal, and other organic materials.
>Some were more successful than others. I also heard something about using
>olive oil to draw the temper after quenching. I'm not sure on this, but I
>think it had something to do with the boiling point of olive oil being a
>good tempering temperature.
>
>Murf
>
>
>
>>-----Original Message-----
>>From: theforge-bounces at mailman.qth.net [mailto:theforge-
>>bounces at mailman.qth.net] On Behalf Of Dave Mudge
>>Sent: Friday, November 26, 2004 5:20 PM
>>To: 'Sponsored by ABANA'
>>Subject: RE: [TheForge] Rust inhibitor
>>
>>In the book, "On Divers Arts" the 12 century author, scholar and all
>>around
>>Renaissance Man, Theophilus describes wrapping up pieces of iron along
>>with
>>shavings of cow horn or hooves and cooking it in a forge. I think that
>>what
>>happens is the carbon from the cow stuff gets migrated into the iron to
>>form
>>some crude steel or at least case hardened iron. I don't have time to look
>>it up now.
>>
>>Theophilus On Divers Arts
>>translated from Latin by
>>John Hawthorne & Cyril Stanley Smith
>>a Dover Publication
>>isbn # 0-486-23784-2
>>
>>dave mudge
>>dave at magichammer.net
>>http://www.magichammer.net
>>http://www.metalsmithinghowto.com
>>
>>-----Original Message-----
>>From: theforge-bounces at mailman.qth.net
>>[mailto:theforge-bounces at mailman.qth.net] On Behalf Of Kevin Donaho e
>>Sent: Friday, November 26, 2004 7:36 AM
>>To: Sponsored by ABANA
>>Subject: RE: [TheForge] Rust inhibitor
>>
>>
>>That could go a long way to explain development of cologne and perfume,
>>BO
>>is one thing, but smoldering cow horn, WHEW!
>>
>>Kevin (smells like money to me, but my wife doesn't appreciate it) Donahoe
>>
>> ------Original Message-----
>> -From: theforge-bounces at mailman.qth.net
>> -[mailto:theforge-bounces at mailman.qth.net]On Behalf Of Bill Alleman
>> -Sent: Thursday, November 25, 2004 10:42 PM
>> -To: TheForge
>> -Subject: [TheForge] Rust inhibitor
>> -
>> -
>> -So I'm watching a show on the Science Channel on recreating the oak
>> -cranes likely used to lift the stones for Gothic cathedrals, and a
>> -French blacksmith and medieval machinery expert claimed that
>> -he can seal
>> -his forgings from rust by rubbing them with a cow horn. He rubbed
>> -relatively lightly on the still-hot iron. The cow was not still
>> -attached. Has anybody tried this one?
>> ---
>> -
>> --= Ya can't blame me: I vote for liberty. =-
>> - BikerBill=- ©¿©¬
>> - allemanse.com=-
>> - cafepress.com/freemarket
>> --= Proud Member - Reality-Based Community =-
>> - FreeStateProject.org
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>> -
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>
>
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