bigrigbri said:
Im not sayin that this method wil produce >70 rockwell on mild steel but I have found that it works well even on en3 en8 mild steel bar stock .
EN3 has .25% carbon, EN8 has .40% carbon and both will harden appreciably in a fast quench. I make bullet forming (swaging) dies from 4140 which is quite similar to EN8 in terms of carbon, it'll harden to about 50RC quite reliably.
Its only probably .001" deep but its enough to give a slower wear rate say on model engines IC and steam.
Using resorces to solve difficult and often costly upgrades is all that this hobby is about
when given increasing financial restraints.
A lot of folks have been under financial constraints in a lot of places, they haven't found the direct application of soot to steel to do anything useful. I would suggest that if they had it would have a use in industry.
Here's a reference to time and case thickness:
http://info.lu.farmingdale.edu/depts/met/met205/casehardening.html
Note that it's talking hours in an optimum environment for carbon migration and hours of soak and ending up with a case of .050".
Try it on a piece of stock and offer up a file to see the difference.
Alternatively I'd suggest that you have a friend process a few pieces of steel half using your process and half simply quenched without and see if you can distinguish them after cleaning (maybe painting as well?). If you can identify them consistently then you have a process, until then I'd suggest that you're simply seeing the normal hardening of a low carbon steel in a quench. (With a really fast quench you can even take 1018 to a pretty good hardness - check out "Super quench", a really fast quench that some claim will take a mild steel to chisel hardness {well, into the 40's anyway}).
I'm not trying to rain on your parade or say you're not seeing something, just suggesting that what you're seeing isn't caused by what you're attributing it to. I regularly harden steels similar to your EN8 "file skittering" levels with nothing but a brine quench.