l'Abeille
32 Cal
It seems the answers to every how-do-I frizzen hardening question are universal, one size fits all - no one ever asks for more details: a frizzen is a frizzen is a frizzen. Heat the bugger up and quench it.
But at the same time, I often see discussion about the difference of materials/methods used by manufacturers and how that influences the quality/lifespan of the striking surface.
Meaning the same process is going to have slightly different results, at the molecular level. But to what degree? And does it matter?
If you had a bucket of frizzens that included samples from every manufacturer, DIY technique, use/abuse history, you-name-it, would you treat any of them differently?
...based on what you can (easily) observe?
surface area / thickness / gouging / total mass / pitting / ...
...based on its history?
manufacturer / age / (ab)use / past maintenance...
...based on all-knowing-infinite-cosmic-knowledge of every detail?
composition / heat capacity / crystal structure...
What's the worst that could happen if you didn't discriminate, and treated them all exactly the same?
Which ones are at risk of being on the losing side, if there is one? (Go on, name names!)
Or, put differently... if I could sell you a robot that hardened frizzens for you, what options would you want it to have?
But at the same time, I often see discussion about the difference of materials/methods used by manufacturers and how that influences the quality/lifespan of the striking surface.
Meaning the same process is going to have slightly different results, at the molecular level. But to what degree? And does it matter?
If you had a bucket of frizzens that included samples from every manufacturer, DIY technique, use/abuse history, you-name-it, would you treat any of them differently?
...based on what you can (easily) observe?
surface area / thickness / gouging / total mass / pitting / ...
...based on its history?
manufacturer / age / (ab)use / past maintenance...
...based on all-knowing-infinite-cosmic-knowledge of every detail?
composition / heat capacity / crystal structure...
What's the worst that could happen if you didn't discriminate, and treated them all exactly the same?
Which ones are at risk of being on the losing side, if there is one? (Go on, name names!)
Or, put differently... if I could sell you a robot that hardened frizzens for you, what options would you want it to have?