I learned from expensive (to Black & Decker, not me - my boss'[s fault) experience that steel investment castings, specifically 4140 in this case, come out of the mold with grains the size of your face. However hard or soft they may be, hardness will vary from place to place on the casting. Lousy idea to use steel investment castings just as they come from the foundry, without some manner of heat treatment.
Annealing or normalizing will grow new grains, finer grains. Fine grains are good, coarse grains are very bad.
To digress a bit for Today's Metallurgy Lesson. You have no doubt heard, or said yourself, something like "it crystallized and broke". That was state-of-the art thinking until about our uncivil war. Then someone used a microscope &c, learned that metals are always crystalline. Thing is, the crystals (I would say "grains") are too small to see with naked eyes. If they are large enough that you can see shiney crystal-like things in a fracture, they are way, way too big. Big grains make things brittle. They did not get brittle from how the thing was used, or how old it was. They got brittle from the previous heat treating or, especially, forging operation on the piece. Forgings should also be annealed or normalized (NORMAL-ize = heat it red & set it down on the floor to cool)