Something has nagging at the back of my mind for some time. Is it important that a frizzen be hard and have a high carbon content or is good enough that the frizzen simply be hard in order for it to spark well. In part this question troubles me because I recall a person in Alberta who examined the material that came off of a frizzen when struck by the flint. His claim (supported by photos) was that many of the glowing "sparks" are actually tiny droplets of steel melted off of the frizzen by the heat generated by the blow of the flint. The counter point is that in my experience, I feel that I have had frizzens that were hard but did not spark well until I treated them with Kasenite.
cheers Doug
The sparks are not flint as the testing you cite indicates. They are shards of steel pulled from the frizzen, some may not even be incandescent but some are molten and will be spherical or nearly so if found in the pan. The principle is the same as a grind wheel ripping steel off the work and making sparks.
Most frizzens today are high carbon.
I have one I think was cast from 4140 and it would spark if treated with Kasenite, for about 40 shots. It would then stop sprarking. Made very lazy Chrom-moly looking sparks when hit with a grinder.
Carbon steel like 1075 will throw bright sparks the burst when ground in this manner.
I faced this one with 1095, problem solved.
Dan