So let me see if I understand this correctly, you continued this argument because you don't view wiki as a valid source of information? Even if the people giving you the wiki links are familiar with the material in question through schooling and careers and can vouch for it being mostly or completely right?
Precisely. That's why I had to look so long and hard for a good cite. Wikipedia doesn't say anything that disagrees with it, but it's a more "scholarly" source. Also, I checked Encyclopedia Britannica, and
holy crap those guys are smoking crack! The EB article says the purpose of heat treating steel is to
prevent carbide formation!
Anyway, I'm also
suspecting a lack of
very common metallurgical knowledge, namely:
1. Low-carbon/mild steels and high-carbon steels are in no way comparable in how they can be heat-hardened (the intermediate medium-carbon steels are much more rarely seen, and do show the transition between low-carbon and high-carbon properties).
2. Low-carbon/mild steels can be strengthened by a maximum of about
50% via heat-treating and
100% via work-hardenening, whereas high-carbon steels can be strengthened about
fivefold to tenfold by heat treatment.
3. Low-carbon/mild steels were invented in the
early 20th century (maybe late 19th?) as a
low-cost alternative to wrought iron, so any discussion of low-carbon/mild steel whatsoever is irrelevant to DF.
4. Low-carbon/mild steels cover nearly the exact same range of carbon content that's present in wrought iron; 0.01% to 0.29% for low-carbon/mild steels, 0.01% to 0.25% for wrought iron.
That actually
is one of those commercial steel industry obfuscations; either "mild
steel" is a misnomer, or "wrought
iron" is.
5. Low-carbon/mild steels are not intended to be used in very high-stress applications like weapons, hand tools, armor, etc., thus their inclusion in a discussion on DF weaponsmithing is doubly irrelevant.
6. Low-carbon/mild steels are actually slightly weaker than wrought iron, even given the same manufacturing techniques, due to their lack of silaceous slag. Low-carbon/mild steels also corrode faster, for the same reason. For the same carbon content, low-carbon/mild steel will be equally as hardenable as wrought iron, only lacking slag strands.
That's about the only thing I can
possibly think of. Slink was talking about low-carbon/mild steel,
not high-carbon steel, and was ignorant of all of the above. I
guess that might make sense, as low-carbon/mild steel is a more "common" material (it's what steel building frames and cars are made of), and thus more likely to be covered by a basic class. IIRC, even 300-level physics doesn't cover high-carbon steel, though 400-level physics does (as will any 200-level structural or material engineering class). Even so, the above 6 facts are relatively common knowledge.
But that's my best guess, anyway.