My Decarbonized Steel verbiage
http://parkerguns.org/forums/showthread.php?p=155187#post155187From Fire-Arms Manufacture 1880 U.S. Department of Interior, Census Office:
The earliest use of decarbonized steel or gun-barrels is generally credited to the Remingtons, who made steel barrels for North & Savage, of Middletown, Connecticut, and for the Ames Manufacturing company, of Chicopee, Massachusetts, as early as 1846. It is also stated that some time about 1848 Thomas Warner, a the Whitneyville works, incurred so much loss in the skelp-welding of iron barrels that he voluntarily substituted steel drilled barrels in his contract, making them of decarbonized steel, which was believed by him to be a novel expedient. The use of soft cast-steel was begun at Harper's Ferry about 1849. After 1873, all small-arms barrels turned out at the national armory at Springfield were made of decarbonized steel (a barrel of which will endure twice as heavy a charge as a wrought-iron barrel), Bessemer steel being used until 1878, and afterward Siemens-Martin steel.
Bessemer/Decarbonized steel tensile strength is about 63,000 psi, similar to AISI 1018 Low Carbon (Mild) Steel. For comparison, the average tensile strength in my study for crolle Damascus was 54,500 psi.
It is assumed the Remington Steel used on the K Grade (Model 1900) Hammerless and (1894) Hammerless Grade F.E. Trap Gun (introduced in 1906) is similar to Marlin Special Rolled Steel and Winchester (Cold) Rolled (Bessemer) Steel with a tensile strength of about 66,000 psi..
Remington introduced Ordnance Steel for the (Model 1894) Hammerless Double in 1897. The 1902 catalog stated the Remington Ordnance Steel tensile strength was 110,000 lbs per sq. inch with an elastic limit of 60,000 psi
The Remington (hammer) Model of 1889 No. 1 with Decarbonized Steel was offered until 1908.
Crescent introduced the Model 6 sidelock hammerless double in 1904 with Decarbonized "Armory Steel". This ad from
1926 for a Crescent tradename gun still lists Decarbonized Steel barrels
