10xx steels, especially 1095 require a very fast cooling quench to get to, or approach max hardness. In heat treating knives, this is critical for the best performance. To get good sparks from a frizzen, maybe not so much. I don't know, but motor oil, ATF will not do for HTing 1095 blades. The only quench that will get 1095 to max is brine. The next best with less chance of cracking is Parks #50 oil. #3 in line is warmed canola oil. What Jerry does also works pretty well. Here are the facts with 1095. To get max hard, 1095 must cool from about 1475° to under 900°/1000° in .6 of one second. Only brine will do that, but the risk of cracking is a factor that must be considered. For frizzens, this is probably not necessary for good sparks, As Jerry pointed out, tempering is a must. Jim Chambers recommends a 375° temper, and that is about right. In my experience, I have found some locks prefer closer to 400°. And the tail area should be tempered even more as Jerry said. Turn the area behind the frizzen face plate light blue or dark blue. If you water quench, do it with brine. Water is more likely to crack the steel than is brine, and brine cools even faster. Temper as soon as the piece reaches ambient temperature, or cool enough to hold bare handed, or it may crack just sitting on your work bench.