Postby Timothy Mankins » Thu Jan 07, 2010 11:09 pm
Thanks. My follow-up question then is: what sort of method or methods would have been used to achieve a differential temper on European blades during the middle ages and/or renaissance? There are four methods of which I currently know, which can currently be used to achieve this effect in a blade:
#1: After the blade is forged, a powerful heat source such as a blowtorch is applied to the edge or edges of the blade, but not to the back or center of the blade. That way, only the parts that you want hardened are affected by the heat, and therefore, only the parts that you want hardened become hardened when the blade is quenched.
#2: After the blade is forged, the entire blade is rapidly heated before being quenched. Because the blade is thinner at the tip and edges than at the core, the tip and edges absorb heat faster than the core, and are cooled faster than the core during the quenching, again achieving a blade that is harder at the edges than at the core.
#3: After the blade is forged, the core of the blade is insulated with clay. Then the entire blade is heated and quenched. The clay insulates the core of the blade, allowing it to remain soft, while allowing the tip and edges to be hardened.
#4: After the blade is forged the whole blade is heated to a high temperature, but only the tip and edges are quenched, allowing them to be hardened.
Were any of these methods in use in medieval or renaissance Europe? OK, I doubt they used blowtorches back then, but was there another method in use, of applying heat to the tip and edges of a blade without applying heat to the center?
What about the second method? I expect it would take a rather powerful heat source to heat the entire blade, and have the tip and edges reach a high temperature before the core. Was this method in use back then?
What about the third method: the method which is used on Japanese blades? Was that in use?
What about the fourth method? This method sounds like the simplest of the above mentioned methods, as well as potentially a very versatile and controllable method.