One can occasionally run across some very interesting alloys in an investment casting. It depends upon what alloy the foundry melted for the job before the 4140. If it was a tool steel, or maybe stainless. some of the alloying elements tend to remain in the furnace refractory & really juice up that 4140.
I recall a mining tool company once that ordered cast widgits, into which were to be brazed carbide bits, the widgits intended to be some tool steel. But the foundry had cast stainless just before & did not use a "wash heat" before this job. Mining Company ended up with some nice high alloy, low carbon steel widgits. I worked up a carburizing schedule for them, which some not-to-be named manager at Nameless Company presented as his idea. The mining company loved the results, their case-hardened non-standard steel far outlasted what they'd used before. Company communications being what they were/are, I doubt they ever learned to adopt something like this new alloy.
Anyway, if the guys says its hard, its very likely hard, regardless of what 4140 Is Supposed to Do. Get it red hot & cool over a long time in hot ashes, coals, vermiculite even, as these assorted replies say.