Doug, don't throw that old frizzen away. I regrind a frizzen at least three timesw before it needs replacing. That's around 10000 shots + or - 2 shots.
When I install a new one, having first fitted it, (isn't that a mouthful) I heat it to orange or glowing red and quench it in motor oil at shop temperature. I re-polish it so I can see the coloours, and heat the pan cover and toe until blue runs up the frizzen face about 3/16". I quench it again just to stop the heat from running further up the face. Now I place it in the kitchen oven at 400 degrees F. for one hour. It will be a uniform straw colour except for the blue area and the darkened toe.
I noticed that it takes a couple of strikes to cut through a skin of non-sparking steel, and the sparking just gets better and better, until it knocks chops out of the flint, when it needs resurfacing on the grinder. I do this by holding the frizzen face against a 6" wheel on a bench grinder with my thumb against the back of the frizzen face. If it's too hot for my thumb, it's too hot for the steel too, and I quench in water and grind again. I remove all of the dished area, and do not re-heat treat again. It will spark like a cutting torch from now until it no longer can be ground.
Jerry Huddleston (God bless him for his benevolence) case hardens the surface of the face while it is bright glowing red, and proceeds as I have described. This adds even more carbon right where it's needed, and the frizzen definitely will spark better than without the case hardening process.
Let us know how you make out.