I'm not familiar with the Scout hollow axle but I'm guessing it broke at an undercut at the end of the thread. I have a Chief axle that broke like that. Indian did a couple of things with heat treating that are kind of suspect and this is probably one of them. More than likely they just made these parts a little too hard. On the other hand, it's lasted over 50 years and that ain't bad. Brazing or welding is probably OK since you have the support of the inner axle but it can also affect the heat treatment and if done improperly it will break again. Keep an eye out for another one. You also mentioned heating and quenching a steel rod. The only way to know how hard it is is with a Rockwell tester. We tried this at the shop I worked in and found that the average steel isn't affected too much by this method. There's not enough carbon in it. You may have picked up enough carbon out of the oil to case harden it a little but that won't be very deep. Here's a pretty good article on home shop heat treating. http://asuwlink.uwyo.edu/~metal/heat.html
The drill rod they mention in the article will get VERY hard, over 60Rc is possible. It will also be very brittle so it needs to be tempered back. With heat treating, you're always trying to find the happy medium between the hardness you need and the brittleness you can stand.
The drill rod they mention in the article will get VERY hard, over 60Rc is possible. It will also be very brittle so it needs to be tempered back. With heat treating, you're always trying to find the happy medium between the hardness you need and the brittleness you can stand.
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