Posted by Derek Lane 2 on 30/12/2018 00:25:44:
I am in the process of hardening and tempering some hacksaw blades after I have worked them. …
In the event of disappointing results it may not be your fault. Hacksaw blades, particularly modern ones, are often made from a thin strip of hardenable steel welded to a much larger mild-steel backing. Only the teeth are set in the hard steel. It's done to make the blade tougher whilst allowing the teeth to be harder (and more brittle) than would be possible in a homogenous blade. This layer construction might be exactly what's wanted in a small wood-working knife but cheap hacksaw blades might be a better bet if they happen to be made from Carbon Steel throughout.
There's a real problem today re-using anything manufactured because modern* engineering is highly tuned to achieve 'value for money'. Even simple articles may be composites of different alloys and other materials recruited from the awkward squad. Not knowing what you're dealing with is a first class beginner booby-trap, which is why I prefer to cough up for known metals.
My advice is to experiment with scrap before putting a lot of work into it.
* By "modern" I mean mainly after WW2, but the trend started much earlier.
Dave