..... you can aneil after welding ! What I mean by aneiling is heat part back up and cover in lime and draw heat down slow....
You can try to anneal it, but it does nothing.
In order to heat treat steel, there must be a certain minimum amount of carbon present. A very commonly used cheap steel is AISI 1020. This is steel with 0.2% carbon. Because of this low carbon content, heating, quenching, cooling, all have no effect on any of it's properties.
My memory has the transition at 0.4% carbon content. That means any steel higher than AISI 1040 can be heat treated.
Here are some of the things you can do to this higher carbon steel:
Quenching:This is where the steel part is heated in an oven until it is glowing red, around 800ºC. Then you take it out and dunk it in oil to rapidly cool it. You can quench it in water, but it doesn't work well since the water in contact with the metal instantly boils, forming a gaseous barrier between the water and the part. This leads to inconsistent cooling rates. Oil doesn't suffer this effect.
The result of quenching is that the part becomes as hard as it can possibly be, and very brittle. This is what you are wanting to avoid when you weld your fan. However, in order for quenching to alter the properties of the steel part, there has to be at least 0.4% C. The fan doesn't have that.
Tempering:If you started with the alloy that is used for springs, then you heat it as described above, quenched it in oil, it would be a useless product. You need to restore some of it's former ductility so it won't break if loaded. By re-heating the part after quenching, up to the point where a shiny part of the steel turns blue, then slowly cooling, you've now created a spring.
Annealing:Heat it up, again to around 800ºC, then insulate it as best as you can to allow it to cool as slow as possible. A common practice is to turn the oven off and let it cool overnight. This is done to relieve any stresses or localized hardening that may exist in the part.
All three of the above processes can only be done to steel with a certain minimum carbon content. (AISI 1040) This is not the stock cooling fan.
Every auto enthusiast has heard of the use of cro-moly steels for making a chassis. These steels have chromium and molybdenum as well as carbon. The Cr and Mo have what is called a carbon equivalent that is used to determine it's heat treating properties. As you've guessed, this carbon equivalent is way over the magical 0.4% that's needed to heat treat. This means when you weld two pieces together, if the weld is allowed to cool too fast, the joint will be very brittle. When this happens, the metal has "air quenched". Also important is to use the right welding rod, so you don't get dissimilar alloys in the weld joint. At the end of the fab of a frame, the better shop will anneal the entire chassis to eliminate all brittle parts. The advanced welder can minimize this effect, but the absolute best is to anneal the chassis.
Here's an experiment you can do to demonstrate what I'm talking about.
One thing most Cal-Lookers have done is to bend a pushrod at least once. If you have one of these bent pushrods, it's the perfect candidate because it's likely cro-moly steel. Also get yourself a wire coat hanger. Cut the coat hanger so you've got the long bottom part. Change the oil in your car, saving the oil, preferably in a metal container big enough to throw the pushrod in. Now get your torches out and heat most of the pushrod until it's glowing orange. Then toss it in the oil. Do the same with the coat hanger. Once you fish it out of the oil, clamp one end of the pushrod in the vise and start pulling on the other end. It won't bend, it will almost shatter. You may need a bit of a pipe extension. Do the same with the coat hanger, it will be just as flexy after the quenching as it was before. That's because the coat hanger does not have enough carbon content.
Another test you can do is to run a file on the pushrod before the quenching, then again after. Afterwards it will be so hard, the file won't bite, whereas before, the file will cut easily.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_steel