Stophel
Member
Let me take back some of my first comments about the case hardened frames of the new S&W's.
I have a 21-4 with the casehardened finish. I put a file to it in various places, and the steel is soft enough to file without too much difficulty. Well, Yesterday, I went to finesse an area around the top front of the frame, where it was a bit lumpy. I wanted to file it and smooth and straighten it out....Hard as a freakin' rock. I was stunned. I actually had to get a stone and stone off the area. The case hardened surface is thin, and it is fileable once the hard part is stoned off, but it is there...in spots. This is the only real hard spot I have found on the gun so far. The inside of the sideplate is soft, and the frame side behind the cylinder is "stiff", but still fileable, as is the grip frame. (the gun is going to be blued after I'm done with my modifications).
I don't know just what process is used for the color casehardening. What I THINK they might be doing is just adding enough of the casehardening medium to get colors where they want them, but not worrying about getting a deep "case", quenching, and then perhaps drawing it down...though that would ruin the colors...unless done in a vacuum? This might leave some harder spots here and there where more of the casehardening medium managed to soak into the steel.
I don't know. At any rate, it is SOME form of actual case hardening.
I have a 21-4 with the casehardened finish. I put a file to it in various places, and the steel is soft enough to file without too much difficulty. Well, Yesterday, I went to finesse an area around the top front of the frame, where it was a bit lumpy. I wanted to file it and smooth and straighten it out....Hard as a freakin' rock. I was stunned. I actually had to get a stone and stone off the area. The case hardened surface is thin, and it is fileable once the hard part is stoned off, but it is there...in spots. This is the only real hard spot I have found on the gun so far. The inside of the sideplate is soft, and the frame side behind the cylinder is "stiff", but still fileable, as is the grip frame. (the gun is going to be blued after I'm done with my modifications).
I don't know just what process is used for the color casehardening. What I THINK they might be doing is just adding enough of the casehardening medium to get colors where they want them, but not worrying about getting a deep "case", quenching, and then perhaps drawing it down...though that would ruin the colors...unless done in a vacuum? This might leave some harder spots here and there where more of the casehardening medium managed to soak into the steel.
I don't know. At any rate, it is SOME form of actual case hardening.