Knife Thread
- jakethebeast
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tkaes years of practice this is just raw shape, but i think iv done fairly good job whit this puukko
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- mattyzip77
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That came out extremely nice. Very good work!!
Go Bruins!!!!
- jackssmirkingrevenge
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Now we know what ancient Finnish birth control looked like
looks great!
looks great!
hectmarr wrote:You have to make many weapons, because this field is long and short life
- jakethebeast
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JSR, your wrong, its modern birth control inthe goddamn winter war there was not enough guns to every finn, so somebodys where running there with grenades and big sticks, you see we use what we have in hand
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- jakethebeast
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The 5" puukko is now finished! it took about 12 working hours, and i am fairly pleased whit the result. Its going to go other side of Finland next week Heres some specs:
Blade:
-117mm long, 20mm wide and 5.5mm thick
-Made from Austrian silversteel
-differential heat treated, tempered to 58-59hrc
Handle:
-Materials: dark walnut, waterbuffalo horn, red polypropylon and brass
-Bolters: 5mm brass
- Tang is riveted to the bottom bolster, giving it maximum strenght
Shieth:
-3mm bullhide, barked
Blade:
-117mm long, 20mm wide and 5.5mm thick
-Made from Austrian silversteel
-differential heat treated, tempered to 58-59hrc
Handle:
-Materials: dark walnut, waterbuffalo horn, red polypropylon and brass
-Bolters: 5mm brass
- Tang is riveted to the bottom bolster, giving it maximum strenght
Shieth:
-3mm bullhide, barked
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- jackssmirkingrevenge
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Oh nice! I love the rough/mirror finish on the blade, and the handle and sheath compliment it perfectly!
hectmarr wrote:You have to make many weapons, because this field is long and short life
- jakethebeast
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leaving the forgemarks to the "cheecks" of the blade is a traditional feature. Hundrets of years ago, when puukko's was a matter of surviving, the blades "cheecks" was never grounded, cause it didint have to be ground. From those ages to this day many bladesmith in finland like to left the forge marks visible, just to keep up the tradition.
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- jakethebeast
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heres the pics i promised in Jörg's thread!
so this is a damascus puukko made by my friend, made in the traditional method. it has 1048576 layers, basicly it has been folded 20 times, made from 2 pieces. materials are 1095 and 15n20. He mader this puukko when he still could make them, sadly he cant forge anymore this puukko is made in 1993, and it can be seen from the hamon of the blade, its not so strongly visible anymore. Handle and shieth he made from the goose he shot, and the leather was barked the traditional method. but heres the pic's i promised!
EDIT: hmm why i cant get photobucket photos here??
so this is a damascus puukko made by my friend, made in the traditional method. it has 1048576 layers, basicly it has been folded 20 times, made from 2 pieces. materials are 1095 and 15n20. He mader this puukko when he still could make them, sadly he cant forge anymore this puukko is made in 1993, and it can be seen from the hamon of the blade, its not so strongly visible anymore. Handle and shieth he made from the goose he shot, and the leather was barked the traditional method. but heres the pic's i promised!
EDIT: hmm why i cant get photobucket photos here??
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- jackssmirkingrevenge
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post the links, curious to see these!jakethebeast wrote:EDIT: hmm why i cant get photobucket photos here??
hectmarr wrote:You have to make many weapons, because this field is long and short life
- jakethebeast
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http://s1235.photobucket.com/albums/ff4 ... %20puukko/
hope this works, the pics are there
EDIT: i changed the link to be a direct link to the album, i really hope it works,im new to photobucket
hope this works, the pics are there
EDIT: i changed the link to be a direct link to the album, i really hope it works,im new to photobucket
Last edited by jakethebeast on Mon Oct 31, 2011 3:54 am, edited 1 time in total.
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- jakethebeast
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NAAAAAHHHHHH its not just a knife, its a puukko knife, traditional damascus
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- jackssmirkingrevenge
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Really nice!
hectmarr wrote:You have to make many weapons, because this field is long and short life
- Fnord
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That's quite an awesome knife, though here is something to consider;
Did he actually fold it 20 times?
If the blade is 1/8" thick, each layer will be only about 400 atoms thick, given there are so many of them.
With such small numbers I think the effect of "traditional" damascus may be lost, and it may act more as a homogenous alloy of the two steels.
But anyway, you can clearly see the nice patterns, so I'm inclined to think it wasn't actually folded 20 times.
Did he actually fold it 20 times?
If the blade is 1/8" thick, each layer will be only about 400 atoms thick, given there are so many of them.
With such small numbers I think the effect of "traditional" damascus may be lost, and it may act more as a homogenous alloy of the two steels.
But anyway, you can clearly see the nice patterns, so I'm inclined to think it wasn't actually folded 20 times.
- jakethebeast
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believe me, it is folded 20 times. Traditional method has different starting point, so it is visible with this kind of layer count.
JSR didnt link the picture that shows the welding marks.
JSR didnt link the picture that shows the welding marks.
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