Wick-
Education Lehigh University, graduated 1963. Dept head used to work at Springfield Armory, came into class with an M1 rifle. This was the bad old days when we didn't shoot our friends & many college professors were actually men. Stripped that rifle down & part by part we had to say how we would make it. That is, forge it, cast it, machine from bar, cold draw, stamp, &c. Then how would be heat treat the part? Fun class, for me.
Learned about steel heat treating first at Black & Decker, Towson, MD. This was case-carburizing 8620, 4320, tool steels including high speed steel. Mix in some areospace, stainless research and, strangely enough, forging & hardening hammers and axes at the old Kelly Axe plant in Charleston, WVA. 1974- retirement 2007 worked with high temperature alloys, applications generally furnace parts in the heat treat industry. Always interested in history of metallurgy, made my first forge weld in wrought iron immediately before I burnt my first iron.
Maybe you already know this, but brine quenching tends to be faster than plain water, and also means LESS likelihood of cracking. This is because the brine minimizes the steam bubbles that repetitively form and collapse in plain water quench, meaning non-uniform hardening. That is why the (good) old blacksmith moves his part in a figure-8 pattern in the quench.
Much cracking is caused by a decarburized layer on the steel. When you buy hot-rolled steel it has a decarburized surface layer. Grind, machine or file it off. Yes, the decarb layer does not get so hard, wouldn't think it to crack, but it also does not expand as much as the higher carbon beneath. When quenched the core stretches that decarburized surface and it cracks.. Hardened steel parts are larger than when they were soft.
I did not know that canola oil was a good practical home shop quench & will remember that.
As I write this I don't recall if you said whether or not your cracked parts had been forged. Forgings are decarbed and very non-uniform in grain size. All high carbon steel forgings should be annealed to get rid of stresses and make the steel uniform, before hardening. For low carbon steel normalizing is the appropriate treatment. I'd have to look up suggested anneal practice for 1095, me I'd use Bethlehem Steel's old book
Modern Steels and their Properties If you don't have one, go on
http://www.abebooks.com and get one. Get the oldest one you can, the tan hardcover ones were better than the newer metallic paperback--old hardcover had temper colors shown.
Nicholson File, when I called on them as the tech service guy, hardened 1095 files from I believe 1440F, low, quenching vertically into brine, no temper. If you quench a file, or a knife, straight into the brine it likely will come out straight. Belly-flop it & it is guaranteed to bend, if not crack. Recall that ex-Springfield prof noting that bayonets needed to be quenched straight in, to remain straight.
Always enjoy chatting about metallurgy. Send your questions, don't believe everything I say but check it yourself.