sdeering, indeed.
trevj, im just a dumb machinist

but it seems the engineers and metal metallurgists that wrote "the handbook of residual stress and deformation of steel" seem to agree with me that any milling operation causes localized work hardening. maybe you should go read what they have to say
Does it say how much of an effect it has?
Lend me your copy and I'll dig into it!
This is it, yes?
http://books.google.ca/books?id=_a9...ual+stress+and+deformation+of+steel#PPA157,M1
Readable, but dry.
Searching through the text finds a lot of weasel words. May induce hardening. Can cause..., etc.
Mostly, reading through the references to work hardening due to machining, it looks to be a good place to start looking if we are about to start engineering the manufacturing process for turbine blades. Not so much pertinent to the discussion at hand here, though.
Any levels of work hardening that may be induced by machining processes are insignificant when compared to the stresses (and hardening, if the alloy is prone to) of flow forming the rifling, during button rifling, and those former, pale to nothingness when compared to the stresses of either cold rolling of the bar stock, or hammer forging the barrel to shape.
In short, I am suggesting that the hardening from any machining process are a red herring in this discussion. That is why I call bull! It is no more valid than your statements about heat treating.
I'm not even a dumb machinist. Not ever gonna be one either, mostly because a card will cost me money to get, that will never come back to me.
But I have been dicking around with metalworking for a hobby for about 25 years, and doing it full time as a job for nearly 10. I get to play a machinist at work, though!
I read this stuff because it actually interests me.
I've heard enough unsupportable theories from the mouths of instructors and "experts" to be fairly familiar with their sound and/or smell, and this one, well, it fits the mold.
Too broad a blanket statement.
There is some dry reading on the work softening of steels floating around the web too. Strange what you can find when you go look. I won't claim that it's applicable here, or everywhere else, either.
Cheers
Trev