I managed to find some sensibly priced material, on ebay naturally,. It was described as "annealed spring steel strip"..I made up the springs as specified by M Evans, and to see what happened, i tried hardening and tempering with a blowtorch, on a sample!. well, the results were not good, serious distortion, due, is suspect, from uneven heating, and the end result was extreme embrittlement. I could hardly handle them without they shattered. I have been following the techniques as set out in the Tubal Caine book on the subject, and following the advice within, decided to construct a temperature controlled furnace. This completed, with a fancy temp controller, tried another sample spring. I'm hardening at 770c, and tempering at 340c. Well, it was hard alright, shattered when I bent it gently, but undeterred, went ahead and tempered it. Some success, it was a spring. Duly encouraged I put one of my finished springs in the furnace, started it from cold and took it up to 770c for the recommended 40 minutes ( 1 hour per in thickness) When it went in the spring was only slightly curved, it came out a semicircle! and, having quenched it I placed it on the bench and is i watched, the top leaf broke in three bits… Undeterred, I cooled the furnace down to tempering level and gently put the spring in. 10 min. soak and into the quench. Amazing, I had a spring!! albeit a most weird shape.. How can I prevent the initial distortion? I had thought of bending a chunk of 1/4 flat bar to the required shape and clamping the spring to that before hardening. Any comments would be appreciated..Tom.