Knife Thread
- jackssmirkingrevenge
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Shineh! looking good
hectmarr wrote:You have to make many weapons, because this field is long and short life
- jakethebeast
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aand here it is, still need sanding. its now on grit 180, its long way to 2000
EDIT: finished sanding and polishing, here she is:
EDIT: finished sanding and polishing, here she is:
Est Sularus Oth Mithas
- jackssmirkingrevenge
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wow... I really love the rough/smooth contrast on the blade! Excellent work as always
hectmarr wrote:You have to make many weapons, because this field is long and short life
- danielrowell
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Awesome knife Jake! I especially like the walnut handle. What angular degree is the blade?
- jakethebeast
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id say its close to 17 degrees, its very basic Puukko angle. the buffalo horn fots great with the walnut, eh?
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- danielrowell
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It sure does!the buffalo horn fots great with the walnut, eh?
- jakethebeast
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just little shame that piece is that small, only 10mm long, 30-40mm eould be much awesome, but that was the only piece i had left, need to buy few more big buffalo horns...
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I haven't posted on spudfiles in ages, but my new spudgun project spurred me to come on back.
In my absence I've been trying out knifemaking in my home, as a hobby, so I thought I'd post my first 2 creations.
The large bowie is the new of the two, although it's rougher to be sure.
It has a 9" differentially hardened 1084 carbon steel blade, 3/16" thick. The Handle is black paper micarta
The smaller knife is S35VN stainless steel, about a 4" blade, 1/8" thick. Handle is tiger G10.
I'm working on a new project (I've just completed a home made charcoal forge and I'm itching to put it to use).
Going to be a differentially hardened tanto. Somewhat modernized, of my own design.
In my absence I've been trying out knifemaking in my home, as a hobby, so I thought I'd post my first 2 creations.
The large bowie is the new of the two, although it's rougher to be sure.
It has a 9" differentially hardened 1084 carbon steel blade, 3/16" thick. The Handle is black paper micarta
The smaller knife is S35VN stainless steel, about a 4" blade, 1/8" thick. Handle is tiger G10.
I'm working on a new project (I've just completed a home made charcoal forge and I'm itching to put it to use).
Going to be a differentially hardened tanto. Somewhat modernized, of my own design.
- jackssmirkingrevenge
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Very impressive for starter projects, well done!
hectmarr wrote:You have to make many weapons, because this field is long and short life
- jakethebeast
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Yam, first ill say those look nice for first knifes! then some critic
firstly the hadle on the bowie doesnt "fit" to the blade. The finishing of the knifes are pretty rough what i see from the pics.
right now i got nothing else to say
your making a tanto, differential heat treated, is that managed via using clay or whitout clay? i always differential heat treat, so remember normalization!! if the blade is long, differential heat treatment will crack the blade if its not normalizated properly
firstly the hadle on the bowie doesnt "fit" to the blade. The finishing of the knifes are pretty rough what i see from the pics.
right now i got nothing else to say
your making a tanto, differential heat treated, is that managed via using clay or whitout clay? i always differential heat treat, so remember normalization!! if the blade is long, differential heat treatment will crack the blade if its not normalizated properly
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- jackssmirkingrevenge
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At least it was deadMoonbogg wrote:the handle is made from one of the bones from his favorite DEAD dog.
Well, better than having them rot away in the ground.Hmm... that's a little macabre for my tastes...
hectmarr wrote:You have to make many weapons, because this field is long and short life
Thanks for the positive feedback, and the critique.jakethebeast wrote:Yam, first ill say those look nice for first knifes! then some critic
firstly the hadle on the bowie doesnt "fit" to the blade. The finishing of the knifes are pretty rough what i see from the pics.
right now i got nothing else to say
your making a tanto, differential heat treated, is that managed via using clay or whitout clay? i always differential heat treat, so remember normalization!! if the blade is long, differential heat treatment will crack the blade if its not normalizated properly
I agree with you on both counts. The... somewhat abnormal handle on the bowie was actually the result of a failure of the depth lock on my laminate trimmer when shaping the handle scales. The original design was going to be more akin to the handle on the smaller knife, with the back of the handle flowing straight down from the spine of the blade. Alas, the best laid plans of mice and men.
I also am feeling you on the roughness of the blades. I'm actually continuing to do work on the finish of the Bowie, being a student, I ran out of abrasives and money right around the same time, so the operation had kind of stalled out at the time of the photo. There are some definite flaws in the blade that I'm not going to be able to remove, but I'm at peace with them. I'm pretty pleased with the finish on the smaller of the two though, doesn't show well in photographs I've been able to produce unfortunately.
The differential hardening I've been doing has actually been using a furnace cement product mixed with fine ash, in 4 or 5 thin layers. I'm pretty anal about annealing and normalizing. We'll see how this one turns out. It'll also be the first knife I heat treat in my homemade forge, so, I may forgo the differential hardening on this project until I get a better feel for the forge.