Spring replacement

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I think the smith I’m referring too was talking about a finished ,installed spring not one being made and heat treated.🤷‍♂️

Depends on your perspective of things I suppose.

Call it what you will but i would fix that spring, I’d inspect it, if the cracks are through, its trash.

Otherwise if not, I’d normalize it first, file off the nooks with a diamond file 120-220. Then polish up the spring somewhat, not mirror finish but nicely polished 220 is fine.

Harden (heat and quench in oil) and temper at 750 for 1 hour.

I mean if the owner is going to be out looking for a new replacement spring, what does he have to lose trying to fix the old one?
 
No and I’ve never filed the bend on one either after being advised by 70 + year old master blacksmith it wasn’t a good idea.

Being the bend is the weak point of the spring..according too him..

Would you not agree?
I'm 82 and been blacksmithing for 40 of those years and gunsmithing for 60. I have made many, many springs and depending on the spring it depends if the bend is the weakest point. Polishing (filing) the surface cracks does not weaken it, but as said the stress risers at surface cracks is a sure weak spot especially at the edges of leaf main springs and will eventually make the spring fail.
 
what would filing out cracks do? that repairs nothing!
cracks are the start of a break when you remove them you lessen the chance of them growing when done right the spring probably never break in that spot. this is why when a professional welder repairs things they drill holes at the ends of a crack before welding
 
I'm with Flinter Nick. I make replacement springs, and file out the imperfections and then polish the spring.
The stamped spring in the photo is typical of their rough condition. Filing away the crack starters helps their reliability.
 
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