Yulzari that is a wonderful video, illustrates stuff more clearly than just words. I am keeping it in my files.
Here, by the way, is how they did things in 1589:
"In The Thirteenth Book of Natural Magick, 1589, G.B. Della Porta describes “ways whereby iron may be made extream hard”. To harden files he says:
Take Ox hoofs, and put them into an Oven to dry, that they may be powdered fine; mingle well one part of this with as much common Salt, beaten Glass, and Chimney-soot, and beat them together, and lay them up for your use in a wooden Vessel hanging in the smoak; for the salt will melt with any moisture of the place or Air. The powder being prepared, make your iron like to a file; then cut it chequerwise, and crossways, with a sharp edged tool: having made the iron tender and soft, as I said, then make an iron chest fit to lay up your files in, and put them into it, strewing on the powder by course, that they may be covered all over: then put on the cover, and lute well the chinks with clay and straw, that the smoak of the powder may not breath out; and then lay a heap of burning coals all over it, that it may be red-hot about an hour: when you think the powder to be burnt and consumed, take the chest out from the coals with iron pinchers, and plunge the files into very cold water, and so they will become extream hard. This is the usual temper for files; for we fear not if the files should be wrested by cold waters."
This four-centuries old process is metallurgically entirely correct. The chimney soot, of course, is a nearly pure source of carbon to carburize or case harden the surface. “Ox hoofs”, provide nitrogen which, along with the carbon, further improves sliding wear resistance. Salt and glass melt the whole mess together to provide intimate contact with the surface, and “activate” the surface to make it easier for the iron to absorb carbon. This is really 21st Century stuff! Even today the “usual temper for files” is just as they come from the quench, with no further reheat/temper/draw.
In Ancient Times (1974 - 1990?) Nicholson file quenched into salt water from about 1440F and sold the files just as-quenched, no tempering at all
I learned a bit working with those guys.