Oooh. Perfect.If you polish the steel to mirror-like finish, melonited surface comes out like Colt royal blue finish.
Oooh. Perfect.If you polish the steel to mirror-like finish, melonited surface comes out like Colt royal blue finish.
What temperature are we looking at for the meloniting process?That's another debate. Brazed handle on the bolt, I will have to ask the provider. The action, I would not hesitate to do one of my 700s. Defiance and others have no problem getting theirs melonited, while others are adverse to it.
Always two sides, take your pick.
About 1000What temperature are we looking at for the meloniting process?
700 degrees is the area where a chromolly type steel is normalized and stress releived. I think that's a good thing, as not only does it keep residual stresses left in the metal (from machining) from making the parts move as temp changes, but also from cracking in parts that have high cyclical loads and areas where there may be stress risers due to shape.
Oooh. Perfect.
You should have at least one in the shop to play with LOL!
There are some makers that nitride them when they build them. One would assume they give consideration on this in with the heat treat as these are some pretty good actions bu respectable manufacterers.More info: Ted Karagias at ARC warns against nitriding his actions because it negatively affects the heat treat.
I'veHas anyone nitrided the new 400MODBB steel from Bartlein?
If they're nitrided, I'm gonna hazzard a guess they're not heat treated.Thanks for the responses. So are the custom bolt actions that come nitrided heat treated before or after the nitriding process?
Salt bath nitride treatment is done after heat treating. Applies to CM and 416SS. Nitriding is an "add on", NOT a substitute for heat threating. Remington 700s. both CM and SS, are machined from pre-heat treated steel. It arrives/arrived at the Remington factory heat treated , probably from the mill it was purchased from. Just because a Rem 700 action can be cut with a file doesn't mean that it's not been heat treated. It has been 'hardened and tempered'. As a machinist (and I began machining in 1974) we have been cutting 4140PH (pre hardened) since it became available. Hard on HS tooling? Yes! But we machined precision parts from it all of the time! Now, most all tooling is of carbide, which will withstand the heat. If you machined an action from annealed steel, and then heat treated it, it would warp because of the differing thicknesses that are found across the action. The loading port side being thinner than the opposite side. Deflection (warpage) has always been a problem when heat treating, whether it be 'case hardening' low carbon steel or 'through hardening' like 4140 and other modern alloys are hardened. As an after note, nitriding can not be done to low carbon, case hardened steels, only on modern, through hardening alloys.If they're nitrided, I'm gonna hazzard a guess they're not heat treated.
I'm not sure what alot of modern actions are made of, but the old ones like the rem 700s were chrome-molybdenum steel in the annealed (non- heat treated state)
There are modern steels out there now that have better tensile strength without having to be heat treated.
Because of the way heat treating chrom-moly distorts and ruins the surface finish, it has to be machined and finished after. There are steels that do keep dimensional tolerances through heat treating but it would still ruin the finish
What temperature are we looking at for the meloniting process?
I did and worked great.Is ok to black nitride factory actions like a Rem 700 plus the bolt? Just curious if the high temps from the process change the metallurgy or original heat treat and weaken it?
I did and worked great.