Jim
I followed your advice, and found a couple of references for tempering temperature and hardness for carbon steel. According to the chart in anvilfire.com, HRC 45 is reached at a temperature of 630o (F), so just above blue. According to Heat Treating Data Book - 10th Edition E-Book - Seco/Warwick, HRC 45 is reached at 900o. Also, per the latter reference, “a typical steel spring has a Rockwell hardness of 38 … on the C scale”. This implies a tempering temperature of 800o on the anvilfire.com chart, and about 950o in the latter reference’s chart.
I don’t feel like I’ve learned anything. Folks on the ALR site apparently make functional springs at temperatures of about 570o (blue) to 800o, with carbon steels ranging from 1070 to 1095.
I’m a little bit baffled as to why spring tempering information is so difficult to come by. This is not rocket science. It would be very simple to do the basic testing, and write a single equation for hardness as a function of tempering temperature for all of the relevant carbon steels. Then hardness could easily be related to the various spring characteristics, such as yield point and fatigue limit. I’d think that this information would be in a Metallurgy 101 textbook somewhere, but I can’t find it. Even my old standby Machinery’s Handbook isn’t helpful.
It seems to me that Jerry Huddleston remains our best source of knowledge on this topic.