Spare Parts #12 - Heat Bluing A Set Of Steel Clock Hands
Heat Bluing A Set Of
Steel Clock Hands, by Clickspring.
In this video
I go through the process of bluing a set of steel clock hands.
Heat bluing of small steel parts is a key element of traditional clock and watchmaking. It can transform the appearance of even the most mundane parts, and is also believed to afford the parts a small measure of corrosion resistance.
The rest of the process for making the hands and motion work of the current clock project can be found here: https://
TBA
If you would like to help support the creation of these videos, then head on over to the Clickspring Patreon page: https://www.patreon.com/clickspring
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A very special thank you to patrons KayKey From
Norway, and Dan
Keen.
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Abbreviated
Transcript:
00:17 Generally its presented as 4 steps - Harden the part, Heat temper it to
Blue,
Polish the surfaces, and then Heat again for a cosmetic blue. But first things first, what is it about heating steel that makes it turn blue?
00:50 When full spectrum light strikes the surface, some is directly reflected by that oxide, and some passes through and is reflected by the underlying metal, and so travels a tiny bit further. The two waveforms are now slightly out of phase, and interact as they leave the upper surface
.
01:06 Depending on the thickness of the film, some colors are cancelled, and what we see are those colors that remain. When the film is thin, we see a pale straw color. As the film gets thicker other colors are removed, and color we see gradually shifts from brown through purple to a rich blue.
01:24 This is known as thin film interference; its what causes the rainbow of colors in soap bubbles, and a very similar effect generates those fantastic iridescent colors you can see on some birds and insects.
01:37 In our case if we get everything right, the result is a magical deep blue color on our steel part, that no other process can quite match.
And I should also mention that the result is not just a pretty blue color, but also a very reliable proxy for determining temperature, which we use during the tempering process in a moment.
01:55 So with a bit of the science behind the process in hand, we can make a few statements about what factors will affect the quality of the final blue color we're pursuing. For one thing it seems reasonable to expect that a uniform oxide thickness would give a uniform color, so it follows that we'll want to heat the part as uniformly as we can.
I've made a dedicated set of bluing tools.
02:31 Any sort of contamination will not only affect
the way the oxide forms, but also the light reflection, so we want the work to be meticulously clean just before we start heating.
Hardened steel will take a mirror polish much more readily than a soft steel. So the first step is to harden the work.
03:52
Once finished, that boric acid coating comes off very easily with a little boiling water. Now at the moment, the parts are glass hard, and much too fragile to be safely handled without risking breaking them, so I need to temper that hardness.
04:43
As it happens the temperature we want to temper
the work to, corresponds to the blue oxide color, a little over
300 degrees celcius, which is why you see the steel blued twice - once is for this tempering, and the second time at the very end, is just for the appearance. And you can see with this hour hand, just how sensitive the bluing process is to a temperature differential.
06:38 The final surface finish comes from using diamantine powder on a tin lap.
Again with short moves to maintain the flat surfaces.
07:51 It pulls the last of the solvent residue from the surface, and leaves the parts quite clean. And you'll notice that I don't touch the parts with bare hands from here on, until the bluing is finished, to maintain that clean surface.
08:40 If the color has any sort of flaw, like for example you can see that the very tip of this hour hand doesn't quite go fully blue, then the part must be taken back to the previous polishing stage.
09:11 There are also several other factors that can affect the outcome too, beyond what I've mentioned here, including the composition of the steel, the ambient conditions, as well as the nature of the light being used to illuminating the part.
All of this can be experimented with to further improve the final result.
References:
Hardening, Tempering and
Heat Treatment (
Workshop Practice)
http://www.amazon.com/Hardening-Tempering-Treatment-Workshop-Practice/dp/0852428375
Heat Bluing A Set Of Steel Clock Hands, by Clickspring.