I was using 1084 and a brine quench - I forget the exact ratio, but it worked out to exactly one container of salt to in my 2 gallon bucket, so I think 8 oz per gallon.
There is actually a long story behind that particular break. I've used 1084 in the distant past for a few small projects made out of a 1/8" piece (which always warped terribly, something that put me off 1084 for a long time), and I don't recall any problems getting them to harden in engine oil, but when I went to quench this new piece in my now-standard veggie oil it wouldn't harden. I think I tried something like three times to get it to harden in oil, with no success. By that time any attempt to keep the grain size down had gone out the window.
What I should have done was thermally cycle it and/or re-anneal it and try again with brine some other day, but I was tired, exceedingly frustrated with a wasted afternoon (I had had to wait several weeks to get the chance to run my forge, IIRC), and I figured that the blade was already likely ruined, so I went ahead and tried it with brine, just to see if the steel would at least actually harden. It did harden, quite well, but it also warped badly, so I tried to straighten it and just put way too much pressure on it after it had cooled too much to be pliable. And, yes, the grain was way too coarse anyway.
I'm giving it another shot. Unfortunately, I decided to try stock removal this time round, because I figured that this way I could work at it at home after work in the evenings and save my precious forge time (limited to Saturday afternoons that I can afford to spend at my parents' house) for other projects, plus at least this way the tang will be as soft as possible when I try to peen it (I can't weld, so that was a concern). Given the extreme difficulty of filing tool steel down to shape by hand, I don't think I will be doing stock removal again unless I lose access to my forge (unfortunately a real possibility since my parents are moving and I have no idea where I am going to store my blacksmithing stuff if it can't go with them).
BTW, I have successfully annealed files by throwing them in a woodstove overnight. I've never tried that with a knife in process, though, for fear of decarbonization. Also, it requires the woodstove to be lit, making it a seasonally-specific option.