not even a wee piece of 52100?
Nay, nay and thrice nay.
Yet again I say nay !
I trade some now and then with one or two other makers when they have something I need but, other than that...
The thing is, if you can get it (and you can afford it) it's always worth buying an excess because prices rarely ever come down. I'm using stuff I bought for coppers that would cost fortunes today, or that you just can't get (W1 for example)
O1 is, at the moment, in a semi-transient state regarding quality. Previously when it was made in the UK or Europe/America quality wasn't an issue. Most of it is made in China now and sometimes you get some that won't harden. I mean, at all. Correct me if I'm wrong but that means it doesn't qualify as O1 to begin with...
I ran into this a few weeks ago with some bits from Cromwell and after the first surprise (read 'shock') I did some testing. I managed to get to Rockwell 53 C straight after quenching with NO tempering, so basically I couldn't get the steel to harden to blade hardness. I even tried quenching it in brine and when that didn't work, warm water. Still wouldn't go past 53C which, by definition, means the chemical mix is all wrong. The same kit and process on my old stock O1 produced the expected results.
More and more I am finding that every time I play with O1 these days anomalies I have never seen before are cropping up. Once my old stock is gone I won't be buying any more unless quality control is improved or it is manufactured elsewhere, or I can find some old stock to replace mine. I know of at least one full-time maker who has experienced very similar problems with recently purchased O1, so it isn't just me being a gimp in the workshop...
A lot of people might not be in a position to fully test their output and may operate on assumption that the material is consistently going to deliver a predictable result. There are nasty surprises in store...
I like O1 a lot, but only when it does what it is supposed to
