First off, that $50 dollar knife shop is one of the absolute worst books you can find as far as heat treating blades. The last info I saw on Nicholson files was that they were W-1, while their Black Diamond series were 1095. I really don't know, except either makes good strikers with a brine quench. If making a blade from a file, and have minimal equipment, it is better to use stock removal rather than forging, because if you don't severely over heat it, all you need is to temper it. Files have a perfect grain size as are. To ready for shaping, in a dark setting, bring the file to a barely can see red color creeping in and let cool Do this a few times. Then try to file the file. If you can't, bring it up to a good red heat, evenly as you can, and let cool. I used to use a mapp torch on each side. That usually softens it enough to work without growing the grain. Don't heat more than a good red. Since you won't know for sure what steel you actually have, consider it to be 1095. That will require quenching in canola oil warmed to about 130°. CANOLA oil. Not motor oil or peanut or Crisco. 1095 requires a very fast cool down from the temperature it is at, as it goes into the quench, to get below 1,000°. About .6 to .8 of ONE second. Or it will not be full hard. Canola oil will NOT do this, but will be close enough to make a good blade, and is the fastest oil without buying commercial quench oil . Have your kitchen range pre-heated, and put the blade in as soon as you can hold it bare handed. Ideally, mid oven edge up. 2 one hour tempers. Cool to ambient in between. I would suggest 450°. In the quench, use enough oil that it will do the job. For a belt knife I would think a gallon or more depending on the container. You can go in horizonal or vertical. I prefer vertical, but you need a tube like, or deep bucket, container. Once you are in the oil, move fore and aft. NEVER sideways. it will warp. Chance are, it will warp anyway. If so there are ways to straighten. Contact me if that happens, and I will give you a couple of options to try.