dan_c wrote: I used plyers to put a 90 degree bend in it and dipped it in water as quickly as possible. Is there some step I'm leaving out?
Yes. Once you've effected the bent and quenched, you need to re-heat to a light straw colour and air cool. Let me explain....
When you heat the metal it will pass through several colours. There's more to it than this, but this'll clear things up a bit I hope.
Heat to blue, metal ends up soft... probably too soft.
Heat to cherry red, metal ends up very stiff, but very brittle.
Heat to light straw (sorta yellowish), probably best of both worlds. Just rigid enough not to bend easily on you, but not so brittle that it breaks on you.
Also, the air cooling will prevent the brittleness.
This is the process I've used and it seems to work well. There is actually a whole heap of information available both on lp101, and on the web in general on heat treating metal. Search for "heat treating" or "metalurgy".
Hope this helps.
db