• This Forum is for adults 18 years of age or over. By continuing to use this Forum you are confirming that you are 18 or older. No content shall be viewed by any person under 18 in California.

Hot oil blueing first time

Daddycaddie67

Gold $$ Contributor
I just had two brakes threaded and wanted them blued so I figured I would try the oil blueing method. The brakes are carbon steel. These Harrells brakes are excellent but they were pretty rough after the smith finished. I deburred them and cleaned with alcohol being careful to wear surgical gloves so as not to leave finger prints.
I had a gallon of air tool oil on the shelf and used that to quench with. I set up a battery screw driver in a vise with a socket driver attached to help maintain an even heat of the brakes. I let the first one heat up till it was “grey” and not changing color any longer and in the oil it went, the second one was quenched when it was an even blue/purple and then was quenched. It’s hard to tell from the light but the first one is a little darker and the second a nice blue/ purple color after sitting in the oil for about 30 minutes.
Tomorrow I think I’ll clean them up and do it again. All in all I think they turned out pretty good.
Thoughts? Feedback? Thanks for looking. E
 

Attachments

  • IMG_2794.jpeg
    IMG_2794.jpeg
    356 KB · Views: 174
  • IMG_2795.jpeg
    IMG_2795.jpeg
    419.6 KB · Views: 169
  • IMG_2797.jpeg
    IMG_2797.jpeg
    344.3 KB · Views: 171
  • IMG_2798.jpeg
    IMG_2798.jpeg
    347 KB · Views: 177
Very nice job Daddycaddy. Looks great!
I've heat / oil blued a lot of small gun parts. It's a great way to get a nice blue color on some steels.
 
Looks great. I've found that this method is not as durable as hot salt bluing or rust bluing but if that's the case it's easy enough for you to re do.
 
I just had two brakes threaded and wanted them blued so I figured I would try the oil blueing method. The brakes are carbon steel. These Harrells brakes are excellent but they were pretty rough after the smith finished. I deburred them and cleaned with alcohol being careful to wear surgical gloves so as not to leave finger prints.
I had a gallon of air tool oil on the shelf and used that to quench with. I set up a battery screw driver in a vise with a socket driver attached to help maintain an even heat of the brakes. I let the first one heat up till it was “grey” and not changing color any longer and in the oil it went, the second one was quenched when it was an even blue/purple and then was quenched. It’s hard to tell from the light but the first one is a little darker and the second a nice blue/ purple color after sitting in the oil for about 30 minutes.
Tomorrow I think I’ll clean them up and do it again. All in all I think they turned out pretty good.
Thoughts? Feedback? Thanks for looking. E
I really like the second one. Almost a little like a saco color.
 
Heat bluing is easy and fun to play around with. Not very durable. We used to use a bullet casting pot with nitre salts. It’s easy to control with a thermometer and the heat knob for the color you want and you can let it soak at the temp you want for straw yellow to violets to shades of blue. Just remember if you’re doing a hardened part at some of the higher temps you’re tempering the part. Once you go from dark blue to pale blue many carbon steels are getting softer. Sometimes a lot softer.
 
Heat bluing is easy and fun to play around with. Not very durable. We used to use a bullet casting pot with nitre salts. It’s easy to control with a thermometer and the heat knob for the color you want and you can let it soak at the temp you want for straw yellow to violets to shades of blue. Just remember if you’re doing a hardened part at some of the higher temps you’re tempering the part. Once you go from dark blue to pale blue many carbon steels are getting softer. Sometimes a lot softer.
Thanks for that suggestion, I’ll keep that in mind. E
 
  • Like
Reactions: swd

Upgrades & Donations

This Forum's expenses are primarily paid by member contributions. You can upgrade your Forum membership in seconds. Gold and Silver members get unlimited FREE classifieds for one year. Gold members can upload custom avatars.


Click Upgrade Membership Button ABOVE to get Gold or Silver Status.

You can also donate any amount, large or small, with the button below. Include your Forum Name in the PayPal Notes field.


To DONATE by CHECK, or make a recurring donation, CLICK HERE to learn how.

Forum statistics

Threads
165,829
Messages
2,204,433
Members
79,157
Latest member
Bud1029
Back
Top