I'll profess my ignorance on Cyanide Case Coloring. I've had more the one gun done with Case Color hardening, but never looked or considered Cyanide Case coloring. That said, I'm now looking at redoing a Fox that was built in the mid 20's and Cyanide was the method then.
Accordingly, I'm assuming the action has to be annealed and the engraving chased, then its sent to whomever for cyanide case colors. When those case colors are applied does that harden the action the way traditional bone charcoal case coloring does? Would assume yes, but I don't know. I know that the new Browning low walls have cyanide coloring, but I think that is more of a dipping process with low heat and the metal is already 4140 I believe.
Appreciate thoughts/comments. Just trying to get smarter on the process itself.
PS. Below is a Browning Low Wall that I had case colored using the same company in Montana that does their actions:
