Dana, I read your post about the hardness test you had done. You are the one that I mentioned having good success with the O1 but I'm sure your setup is a lot better than mine. I guess I was expecting the blade to come out nice and smooth with just some scale on it! I'm actually going to get it tested tomorrow at work. I'm friends with the guy that's the head of the steel lab! LOL.... I'll post the results and see how well I did.
Lin, thanks for the advice. Unfortunately the only place I can set my forge up is in the back yard. I guess I can try it the next time late in the evening. As far as the color goes, with it buried in the coals it's kind of hard to watch the color change. I was afraid that pulling it out of the coals to look at it, the color might change too quickly in the air to get a good read. Plus with this thin steel it seems that the steel gets "up to heat" extremely quickly. It goes non-magnetic really fast. Should I get a good fire going with the blower then turn the air off and put the blade in to let it start heating at a slower rate? Then put the air flow back to it. Does this do any good? Also how do I control the environment (oxidation) in an open forge like this? Is it all a matter of the air flow I have? And how can I tell when I have it right? Sorry for all the questions but I just want to produce a quality blade that I can use, give away, or put in the swap here. I still have a long way to go.
By the way, I used the advice of, I believe it was KBA on here, about the two tempering cycles. He posted some time back on another thread about the multiple tempering cycles to fully transform the steel structure (austenite) in case it wasn't completely transformed during the quench. I think I'm stating what he posted correctly, in laymans terms. He was much more detailed in the thread that I read though.
Thanks for the advice. And any other advice is welcomed. I'm just starting at this so I can use all the help I can get.
Aaron