I am new to the group, so forgive me if I sound obtuse or confusing.
I am working on a way to make my own locks. This would also include the frizzen. I have heard references to forge-welding a sheet of steel to a piece of wrought iron, and then hardening the piece. But I have also heard of brazing a piece of steel to the iron, which makes no sense to me. At brazing temps, the hardness of the steel would be lost, and yet if you try to harden it thereafter, the join would be compromised, and the two metals would likely separate. I know today I could probably make a frizzen out of 1095 and quench it carefully and have a satisfactory battery, but I am not convinced brazing in this manner could work at all, and give a decent spark.
Perhaps the brazing and hardening were done in one process, maybe held together in a way I am not aware of? Or was there a more solid process of holding them together in the brazing process, like a rivet? Borax would have certainly be held within the joint until the solder applied, but I have seen no originals, so cannot guess at it. Any ideas?
Matt