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Hi Greenswlde,Nice Blue David. Do you use a pile of charcoal ash on a hot plate. I,like you use Dry Lime powder.. O.D.
I am lucky to have a heat treating oven that I use for casting, heat treating, case hardening, and charcoal bluing. It allows me a controlled heat for hours if needed. I use a steel box with lid, pack it with bone and wood charcoal, and heat it in my oven. I used to use pretty high heat (about 450 C, 800-850 F) but I learned from a master finisher to lower the heat to about 370 C (700 F). The lower temperature did not change the color at all but what it does do is lower any risk of making metallurgical changes in the steel or iron. I use linseed oil and rottenstone rather than lime. I am going to try your method of dry polish with lime. The oil and rottenstone works very well but it does change the color a little. It deepens and darkens the blue a bit, sometimes maybe more than I desire. Plus, I have to degrease the parts each time in the heating cycle after using the linseed oil. Thanks for mentioning the lime.
I am going to be doing a lot of charcoal bluing this next year. I have another late flint English rifle to build plus 3 cased pairs of dueling pistols. Two Wogdon pairs and a pair of early Twiggs. Hopefully, I'll be getting the lock castings for them from Kevin Blackley in a few months.
dave
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