Hi guys
Thanks for the feedback and comments
Answers for Cisco:-
There are many spring steels listed in Machinery Handbook, about nine or more of the most common and not so common. There are seven stainless steel alloys, three copper based alloys and around ten nickel alloys listed in the M/H. Copper based spring alloys are very expensive and any that contain beryllium are toxic. One of the very best stainless steel alloys for springs is the solid hard S.S. wire used for fishing traces. It is usually coloured a rich plumb shade. This wire is produced as cold drawn. Any heating will destroy (anneal) the spring qualities. I have used it for special springs in guns and RC aeroplane parts very successfully. The grading of spring steel is defined by the specific elements that go into the composition (the recipe) and also what the spring will be used for. Eg. Spring steel - A229 should not be used for shock and impact above 175 deg C or in sub-zero conditions.
Spring steel always comes as fully annealed stock. It may be worked with any hand or machine tool. It is especialy easy to shape a part with a hacksaw and a file/s. ALL bending of the part being made MUST be done at red heat. This is easy to do and very successful. Cold bending will induce "work hardening" and small radius bends will often fracture. When I worked as a gunsmith, I made many single leaf flat "hair-pin" shot gun springs. These were bent like a hairpin and closed flat at the bend. They were then machined in the lathe, shaped to a special hook at the end, tapered,polished and hardened/tempered. I could make one in under two hours to even just one hour, it depended on how complex the spring was.
Polishing
When polishing a small precision spring prior to teat-treatment, the "polishing lines" should run from end to end. If you polish by sliding emery tape along a revolving round part, the circumferential lines actualy form a stress point where a fracture can/will develop. After polishing in a drill or lathe etc, hand finish the part with wet and dry with longitudinal rubbing. This may not always be possible but a bench grinder/polisher will do a more than good enough job. Just be very careful not to have the part snatched out of your hand/fingers.
Threads in flat leaf springs
Avoid them like the Black Plague. It is impossible to selectively heat-treat a spring and leave a soft spot for a threaded hole. The spring will flex at the soft (or softer) spot and will be virtually usless. If a threaded hole
must be used, the hole is drilled and tapped in the usual manner but a tap that is .005" larger in O/Diameter is used. The slight increase in size will make alowance for the shrinkage of the material/threaded-hole after heat-treatment. Do not try and run a tap into a tempered spring -- unless you enjoy making things twice over and buying more taps

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To mke a spring or hardened steel part "workable" it must be annealed or normalised. To anneal the part, heat it all over to a red heat, ie a heat that will glow bright red in the dark. Place it in a box of slaked lime (garden lime) and cover it with at least 2 or 3 inches of lime. Come back in 12 hours and take it out. This is called Annealing and produces the softest state obtainable.
Normalised steel. This is heating the same way and cooling in air. The part may be a little tougher but still very soft. Most steels are normalised when you buy them.
My C/5 Project.
This has unfortunately had to be on hold due to extreme pain in my hip and feet. I was also called back to do some drawing for my ex boss. It has been too cold at night (and also too tired) to work in the workshop. CAD drawing and designing is mentaly exhausting and then building becomes too much and yet the building is very relaxing. I hope to get back to it next week. I just came back from a three day (reduced to two day) fishing trip. It was so rough that we all became sea sick. I was even sick and this was the first time ever in over fourty plus years of fishing and boating, yes, it was really

bad.