I have some exciting stalking booked for the moment we are given the all-clear to travel further afield.
And before that I have a range day booked per NRA guidelines. I will get to fine-tune some loads for the stalking.
Pending that, I crack on with my primary lockdown hobby: knife-making. Some early successes and some heat treat fails. So I decided I need to be more certain of forge temperatures.
Inexpensive K-type thermocouples abound on the internet but very few are rated to the 1100℃+ needed to HT stainless steel. And many that are can only survive one or two runs at that temp
So my quest was on to find out whether there are any thermocouples out there that can give accurate results and survive multiple heat cycles. The latest addition is a stainless steel probe of 7mm girth. It looks the part 
I have some Orton cones from Utecktok which I will test drive as soon as I can source some appropriate clay to bed them. Alantoo recommended an optical thermometer, so I got one of them too. Old and new stainless thermocouples in forge
Data compared with optical readings
suggest new stainless probe is probably in the right ball park [upper of the two readings on the DMM at left]. The difference between that probe and the optical may reflect the actual temp gradient between probe tip and forge epicenter.
So what I think I will do going forward is use the stainless probe to warm up and stabilise the forge temp and acetlylene flow rate, and then switch to optical surface readings on the work piece to ensure fine control of temps.
And before that I have a range day booked per NRA guidelines. I will get to fine-tune some loads for the stalking.
Pending that, I crack on with my primary lockdown hobby: knife-making. Some early successes and some heat treat fails. So I decided I need to be more certain of forge temperatures.
Inexpensive K-type thermocouples abound on the internet but very few are rated to the 1100℃+ needed to HT stainless steel. And many that are can only survive one or two runs at that temp
So my quest was on to find out whether there are any thermocouples out there that can give accurate results and survive multiple heat cycles. The latest addition is a stainless steel probe of 7mm girth. It looks the part 
I have some Orton cones from Utecktok which I will test drive as soon as I can source some appropriate clay to bed them. Alantoo recommended an optical thermometer, so I got one of them too. Old and new stainless thermocouples in forge

Data compared with optical readings
suggest new stainless probe is probably in the right ball park [upper of the two readings on the DMM at left]. The difference between that probe and the optical may reflect the actual temp gradient between probe tip and forge epicenter.So what I think I will do going forward is use the stainless probe to warm up and stabilise the forge temp and acetlylene flow rate, and then switch to optical surface readings on the work piece to ensure fine control of temps.
