bronco_mudder said:
If you are heating chrome moly, or carbon steels and quench them, be it in water, oil, or what ever they will not be softer they will become harder, and more brittle. To become softer the part has to be cooled slowly, ie. wrapped in some type of insulation, or placed in an annealing oven.
Well, you got that sorta right, and ass backwards at the same time.
To "harden" steel you need to heat it up to what is known as the "critical range". The critical range is around 1500°F for a steel like 4140. Visually the steel is a bright red at this temperature. You can also tell when it is in the critical range because it becomes non-magnetic. If you then quench it - in whatever media, oil, water, brine, air, etc... is appropriate - it will be hardened to it's maximum hardness. Too hard and brittle to use for most purposes.
To reduce the hardness to a point where the steel is both tough and hard, we heat it again in a process called tempering. This is also referred to as "drawing the temper" or "drawing back" the steel.
Tempering is where the rainbow of colors that we are talking about comes into play. By heating steel up to approximately 300°F, we can make it a pale yellow color. At a little higher than that the steel will turn bright yellow, which is the "straw" yellow you are talking about - it is also the common temper for knives. Between 300°F and 450°F the steel will transition between pale yellow to darker shades of yellow until it is a light brown. The darker the color gets in this range, the less hard and more elastic the steel becomes. As you continue to heat it, it will turn from brown to purple to blue, becoming progressively less hard and more elastic. "Blue" is the classic temper for springs. At around 600°F the steel will begin to turn gray and at that point the metal is not "hard" anymore, even though it is not fully relieved. At this point you would need to re-harden it, if hardness and temper are a required function.
So in TEMPERING, which is what we are discussing, the hotter you heat up a metal, the softer it becomes.
SIG, the color/temperature goes roughly like this:
Pale yellow 300°F
Straw yellow 400°F
Purple 475°F
Blue 550°F
Gray 600°F