I found some of this blog quite useful and some of it to be wrong with regard to tempering steel (not stainless, I have no idea about this metal).
Straw or yellow color tempering is still a bit too hard and probably also too brittle to my mind and will easily crack or break. From memory, it is the color used for making metal scrapers for bearings, sharpness being required.
I use the cheapest hacksaw blades around and re-temper them myself to be strong and springy, its quite easy to do.
I like a long pick, so I first just break the blade in half, this is far longer than most people like though....I temper before grinding the shape as tempering a small thin pick after grinding is quite difficult to do correctly and uniformly, in fact the only method that really works is the oven method then, mentioned elsewhere.
I (as mentioned earlier by someone else) heat the end of the blade (about the last 1 to 1.5 inches only) to cherry red and quench in water, now the blade is very hard, but also very brittle and easily broken.
I then clean the blade using wet and dry 240 until the steel is nice and clean, this is to allow you to see the color as you reheat the blade in the same area again, but use a lower temperature flame and keeping that part of the blade moving back and forth as otherwise you will miss the correct point in the color changes.
Heat gently, making sure that as the colors go over the surface, it is as even as possible over the area that will become your pick, when you see it turn to somewhere between brown & blue, quench then as quickly as possible in water and you will have a good springy but hard pick. I personally find blue best, but experiment and see what suits you.
Before grinding to the correct shape, clean both sides of the blade using wet and dry 240 so that each side is shiny again, this is so that when grinding, you will see any color change that happen if the metal gets too hot from grinding too long without cooling, sometimes also called burning. Avoid this like the plague, keep cooling it frequently while grinding.
If the metal is dirty, or still blue from tempering, you will not see burning so easily.....
Final polish as per usual and you have a good pick ready for anything you can throw at it!
For more detail on colors & tempering, use the following link:
http://www.threeplanes.net/toolsteel.html
Sorry, I have not understood how to make it an active URL, you will need to copy it and paste it into your browser!![/url]