The spring for my frizzen is rather weak. The firzzen doesn't really snap closed with much authority. I was thinking that opening the angle of the spring should give it some more umph, but before I do this I figured i should double check.
I was thinking to heat the spring bend to cherry red, open it a bit, requench in oil.
1. Would it need tempering? If so, what's your favorite process?
2. Would this really do much, or am I better off ordering a new spring (from Chambers)?
Yup! The replacement part was cheap. Might want to just order a replacement IF there is one available.Fine, but mine was weak enough not to keep the frizzen closed if it got much of a bump. Not a desirable characteristic in a hunting rifle that is carried through the brush. It doesn't matter how well the frizzen sparks if all the priming falls out by accident.
My late father,(1998-1956) who taught me to make spring would always Double or Treble temper Finger tools,Springs that picked up links on High speed chain m/cs at around 150 lk/min. The First was to STRESS Releive.The second to De-embrittle and the third to re-enforce the orginal temper by colour,(unfortunately-only learned by watching a Master).
Dave's description is as close as possible to perfecf.Though if you follow the first two you need'nt go to Grey.."Very" OLD DOG..
Seems to me that spring temper is 600 degrees, anyway that is what I set my lead pot at.
Spring temper using common high carbon spring steels is 750°F. No lower than 725°F, ideally. Using the simple 10xx steels and similar, bring to 1475°F or red orange heat, and quench in Parks #50 oil, or warmed canola oil if you can do no better. Temper ASAP. The higher carbon 10xx steels, and some others, can break when cool just sitting around waiting for temper.Seems to me that spring temper is 600 degrees, anyway that is what I set my lead pot at.
It seems the range is from 572 to 932 so I guess you are correct. I suppose it depends on application. I made new main springs and frizzen springs from o-1 after mine broke and they still work after 65 years. For my cherries I make to cut molds I temper at 300.
Temper heat set aside and out of the picture, the ideal spring temper hardness required for most high carbon steels is in the 42 to 46 Rc hardness range. + or - a tad. Not many of us have a Rockwell hardness tester, but that is the hardness range for good springs if you do or have access to one. Much less hard and at a given point, the spring will take a set bend. Much more and at a given point it will break.600 is ok for sear springs, and other smaller springs like rammer spoons.
I woudn’t go to 570-650 for mainsprings and frizzen springs.
Not saying it can’t work but the performance of the spring is not any better if you temper a spring at 600 than if you temper it at 750, 750 is kind of like your safe harbor against it breaking and developing a crack, so why not temper at 750?
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