Submitted by georgecoffey t3_11e0lhk in explainlikeimfive
georgecoffey OP t1_jac3e6l wrote
Reply to comment by AcornWoodpecker in eli5 What is the difference between Iron and Steel? by georgecoffey
I appreciate your explanations, and I get it, but is there something you can point to for the point at which you "cross over" from the different types of alloys called "iron" to ones called "steel". If someone handed you a lump of ferrous metal and said "is this iron or steel" what would you look for to answer that question?
M8asonmiller t1_jac6uop wrote
Whether there's carbon in it
AcornWoodpecker t1_jacps7a wrote
Maybe you're looking for an answer of how we know how much carbon there is in a particular bloom or billet.
When I smelt iron sand into a bloom, as it's called, there's varying degrees of carbon infused all over and through the bloom. I chop up the bloom and spark test the different pieces. Depending on how much carbon there is, the spark will look different starting from a short dull streak and gradually adding more and more forks in the spark until it looks like a mini firework and then back to long dull sparks and then short ones again.
In the early days, smiths and foundrymen probably didn't explicitly know it's about carbon content, but relied on feel and observation, the sparkly bloom makes the stronger sword etc.
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