Sandman 2234 you have a good point on heat treating. I would expect ht blades would be expensive, was a company in Jax that heat treated a few years ago, don't if they are still in business. My biggest concern with heat treating would be making the blades to hard and brittle, as they would /could shatter on impact with a rock, fencepost ect. Someone on TBN has this answer or the ability to figure this out. Please let us share in your knowledge. scrapironford
I used to work with a manufacturer of large heat treated tools, and was involved in engineering and quality. I've spent hundreds to thousands of hours in metallurgical testing labs studying the effects of heat treatment on cutting tools.
If bush hog blades could be heat treated to 45-50 Rockwell "C", they would not catastrophically chip or fly apart, yet stay sharp far longer between sharpenings. The blades on my bush hog seem to be almost dead soft, which is
ridiculous. Lawyers have spoiled things for us, mostly for a red herring.
You can't simply take any bush hog blades and heat treat them. They have to be made from a material that is heat treatable. If the metal isn't suitable for simple hardening and quenching, they can be carburized, or "case hardened".
Case hardening is the ideal condition for large cutting blades. That way, your cutting edge can be very hard and
self sharpening, yet the core can be soft to resist cracking. Case hardening is expensive, because the part must stay in a high carbon atmosphere for 2-3 days at 1700-1900F.
Ideally, the bottom of a mower blade should be case hardened to around .060", and the top masked off to keep it 10-15 points softer. That way, the top of the blade would erode much faster than the bottom, leaving a sharp cutting edge. The sharp edge would chip slightly if it struck a rock, but would pose no hazard (the rock fragments would be 1000x larger, and pose far more danger). Tiny chips of metal simply will not penetrate skirts and guards.
Now,,, for my purpose, which is mowing 8 acres of weeds and grass with no rocks or bricks, a carburized blade would be awesome. If you mow junk, or mow professionally, heat treating probably wouldn't help as much. But neither would sharpening.