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Thread: Knife making!
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07-10-2016, 04:46 AM #1
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Thanked: 481Knife making!
One of my friends decided to start his own blacksmithing shop. On Saturdays for a small fee he gives us access to the shop and tools, along with instruction. Last Saturday I got an idea and started working on a little something.
If I remember right that was taken right after It was quenched for hardening. Still fairly rough, but it's starting to look like a knife!
It's made from a single billet of twisted Damascus. Should look pretty good when it's polished and acid etched to bring out the contrast between the O1 tool steel and San Mai layers.
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07-10-2016, 05:08 AM #2
I would love a chance to do somthing like that! For now I have to stave off my knife and razor disease by making new scales/covers and lots of sanding since I don't have a real shop in which to work. Make sure to keep us posted
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07-10-2016, 10:14 PM #3
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Thanked: 481He's going to temper it during the week, and I'll get to mess with it more next weekend. I'll probably do the final shaping of the knife, then all the cleaning, polishing, and sharpening. I'm kind of excited to see what the final product will look like.
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07-10-2016, 10:17 PM #4
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07-24-2016, 09:07 PM #5
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Thanked: 481Late updates, and a small correction on the materials. It's made from an 11 layer billet of 1095 and 15N20 carbon steels. We beat it into a square rod, then twisted it about 4 rotations and hammered it into the final billet that this was made from.
Last week I spent a few hours with a hand file cleaning off the corrosion and making the handle blend seemlessly into the blade. I also cleaned up some places and hit it with acid to bring out the pattern and get an idea what the final product will look like. This is where it was when I decided to pack it in for the night.
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07-24-2016, 09:13 PM #6
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Thanked: 481This weekend I actually started work on another billet, and in between hammering sessions I put work in on this knife to clean the rest of the scale off the handle and make the twists flow a little better. All that's left is to clean off the monkey tail and polish away the hand file scratches. As nice as this looks, I'm not sure I would do this a second time, because cleaning up those twists has eaten up a lot of time. Then again, it gave me something to do (aside from sipping whisky) while waiting on the metal of another billet to heat up so it wasn't a total loss.
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07-30-2016, 05:31 PM #7
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Thanked: 227Just out of curiousity gents. What is required to make, for instance a simple little sheath knife?
Regards
Geek
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07-31-2016, 11:35 AM #8
Assuming you want to do it yourself and it is a basic knife, very little.
Some tool steel such as O1, L6 or O2, or failing that an old file you might buy at a garage sale. It has to be an old steel one, not a modern one.
A charcoal fire to anneal the steel in case of an old file.
Soemthing to shape the knife: files, belt sander, angle grinder, benchtop grinder, etc.
Sandpaper.
Some handle material. Can be anything really.
charcoal fire for bring the knife to critical temperature, and then a vegetable oil quench.
more sandpaper.
That's about it.Til shade is gone, til water is gone, Into the shadow with teeth bared, screaming defiance with the last breath.
To spit in Sightblinder’s eye on the Last Day
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07-31-2016, 09:14 PM #9
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Thanked: 227Thanks Bruno.
Was just a curiosity. Maybe something i would be interested in trying. How long would a small knife take to manufacture?
Geek
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07-31-2016, 10:48 PM #10
Impossible to say. You are making a first of something. There is always trial and error involved, figuring out how to use the tools best, figuring out how to fit a handle to a blade, etc. Depending on how much knowledge and experience you have to build on, and which tools you have at your disposal, it could take you anywhere from a day to a month.
Til shade is gone, til water is gone, Into the shadow with teeth bared, screaming defiance with the last breath.
To spit in Sightblinder’s eye on the Last Day