Thank you Miller; I missed that. Is there a date on the 1020 Spec. Chart?
I would VERY much like to composition analyze samples of Hunter Arms Royal, London, Crown & Nitro Steels.
The Armor Steel sample was comparable to AISI 1045 Plain Carbon Steel, but with slightly higher sulfur (.075) and phosphorus (.112) content similar to AISI 1211 rephosphorized and resulfurized steel.
Walt Snyder graciously shared a 1919 Ithaca Gun Co. letter from A.P. Curtis, General Manager requested tensile strength testing on a section “cut from a barrel made in Belgium” to be performed by E.J. Stormer of Racine, Wisconsin.
The letter did not indicate if the barrels were “Smokeless Powder Steel” used on the Field grade, also commonly found with the ‘LLH’ mark of
Laurent Lochet-Habran, “Fluid Steel” or “Nitro Steel” used on the No. 1 and No. 1 1/2, Cockerill Steel used on the No. 1 Special, or “Best Fluid Steel” on higher grades.
Tensile strength was reported to be “about 70,000” psi.
Carbon .32%
Manganese .78%
Phosphorus .018%
Sulphur .033%
No molybdenum, chromium, or nickel
This is quite similar to the composition of Parker Titanic Steel.
The ‘LLH’ mark of
Laurent Lochet-Habran has been found on L.C. Smith Royal, Armor, London, Crown and even Nitro Steel barrels (on an Eagle Grade) from 1914 to 1948, Hunter Arms Fulton and "Gladiator" & "Ranger" for Sears, and also Fox, Ithaca, Lefever, Crescent, and Baker guns. This composition MAY therefore be that of the Belgian ‘rough forged tubes’ used by most U.S. makers.
The 2 or 3 still interested in all of this

will recall that 'Zircon' resurfaced last Spring, and he still has about 40 Pattern Welded and Fluid Steel barrels to be tested. My sincere hope and prayer is that they don't end up in some recycle bin if something happens to him.