I stopped lock work last August but still make a few double set triggers and I still have Kasenit,
Brownell's and Cherry Red. I use a #5 torch with a tank of dissolved acetylene as a heat source
and I heat the triggers to orange/red and put them in the Cherry Red or Brownell's powder.
Let them cool a bit,pull them out (they're on a wire)and reheat to the same color and after
about 3 minutes quench them in 5 gallons of water that has 2 pounds of Potassium Nitrate
dissolved in it and it hardens the triggers and leaves a low level of color. I don't polish them
to a near chrome finish but the color is still good.I know this is a backwoods idea but it works.
The sears and tumblers on MOST of my locks for the last 50 years have been made from 0-1
and 1144 StressProof,both are oil hardening steels.
Jim and Katherine are making available extremely fine products for the current group of gun
makers and I am glad to see it.I wish my shop was a neat as theirs
but it ain't nor can it
be.My wife Brenda and myself wish for all who see this a safe,sickness and accident free 2020.
Bob Roller