Guys,
I understand and entirely agree with the last comments on the hacksaw blades we use today. Personally, I have repented (several ties, too!) after buying cheap blades. After about 10 minutes of use, they are toast. You are probably saying to yourself - been there & done that. But think on the gunsmith in a tiny village near Lancaster in 1785! Right, hitch up old Dobbin, I'm going to Lowes for some more bimetal precision blades!
The photo posted 8 Dec shows a section of the John Wyke tool catalog. Here you can see hacksaw blades for sale, certainly straight carbon steel ones. The trip from Birmingham, England to Crossroads, Pennsylvania is months long, so although available, they were not common. I believe that the gunsmith sharpened & resharpened his blade until it looked like the example shown.
I have great respect for the modern craftsmanship and artistry displayed on this website. But think that the original guns were made without bimetal, carbide, CNC or Track of the Wolf. If more of us would really make a gun part using only period techniques and tools, we would stand in amazement of an original gun, and the awsome skill it took to make it. Perhaps here is a challenge, to make a hacksaw blade and cut wrought iron with it. No, I have not done this.
Jim Everett