MJ,
I use a warco table grinder with a 180 grit belt to do the distal taper on my swords & knives.
I use a 6 inch fine Norton grinding wheel to cut the deep hollow grind to my blade bevels on knives, I usually either do flat diamond cross section or lozenge cross section to my Saxon/Nordic swords with full fullers where applicable.
I made both my vertical sword gas forge, knife forge and the burners I run with 1 mm jets, gets to critical soon enough
All my finishing is to bright done with finer and finer wet & dry until I use the polishing wheel to finish the blades with cannings compound.
Anyhow, here's the Anglo-Saxon Englisc society knife I forge for said society. I was asked to design and forge a knife which belongs to the society alone. After much thought I decided to work out how I saw the traditional Northern Germanic seax may have developed should it have mutated into a utility/tactical knife of today.
I use a full tang with the last 3/4 inch threaded with a M6 x 1 thread and a shaped pommel fitted so the burned on handle can be remade if it gets trashed at any time.
The wood is English grown Ash (I cut it myself and season it over time) and stained with Jacobian Oak before the numerous varnish coats.
Hope you approve and accept my apology for the less than perfect picture (I don't do photography )
Wulfshead
couple knives i made
Re: couple knives i made
Area 4 Coordinator
For the strength of the pack is the wolf, and the strength of the wolf is the pack
For the strength of the pack is the wolf, and the strength of the wolf is the pack
Re: couple knives i made
MJ
Those are very impressive looking knives , excellent work !
If you produce more I'm sure they would sell like hot cakes , I would definitely be interested in purchasing one
regards
Jon
Those are very impressive looking knives , excellent work !
If you produce more I'm sure they would sell like hot cakes , I would definitely be interested in purchasing one
regards
Jon
- Ginger Ranger
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- Location: South Wales
Re: couple knives i made
They look amazing better than most you see available online. Great job there ☺
Paranoid=No
Prepared=YES
Prepared=YES
Re: couple knives i made
MJ,
After following the trail to the company you pointed me in the direction of I can clearly state my wife will kill you should we ever meet
Very impressive bit of kit is that vertical belt grinder and I think I have a space where one would fit quite nicely.
I was looking to buy the all singing & dancing belt grinder that was made by a smith for smiths from America. That one was circa £3000 but had the ability to run quite fine belts. What's the fine belt size for the mini-grinder that you use ?
Love tool porn, love blade-smith tool porn the most.
Cheers,
Wulfshead
After following the trail to the company you pointed me in the direction of I can clearly state my wife will kill you should we ever meet
Very impressive bit of kit is that vertical belt grinder and I think I have a space where one would fit quite nicely.
I was looking to buy the all singing & dancing belt grinder that was made by a smith for smiths from America. That one was circa £3000 but had the ability to run quite fine belts. What's the fine belt size for the mini-grinder that you use ?
Love tool porn, love blade-smith tool porn the most.
Cheers,
Wulfshead
Area 4 Coordinator
For the strength of the pack is the wolf, and the strength of the wolf is the pack
For the strength of the pack is the wolf, and the strength of the wolf is the pack
Re: couple knives i made
i would have loved to have bought the larger with variable speed (about £1200) but my situation demanded something more portable, at the moment its stored behind the sofa and taken out under the porch when needed. it seems to do the job ok, runs at 1400 rpm with a 1.5 hp motor.Wulfshead wrote:MJ,
After following the trail to the company you pointed me in the direction of I can clearly state my wife will kill you should we ever meet
Very impressive bit of kit is that vertical belt grinder and I think I have a space where one would fit quite nicely.
I was looking to buy the all singing & dancing belt grinder that was made by a smith for smiths from America. That one was circa £3000 but had the ability to run quite fine belts. What's the fine belt size for the mini-grinder that you use ?
Love tool porn, love blade-smith tool porn the most.
Cheers,
Wulfshead
the finest belts i've run on it so far are 120 grit, i have some 240 grit for the little clarke 1x30 which takes most of the slog out of the sanding
-
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Re: couple knives i made
How the hell did you do that backstrap??
She is one of the prettiest modern style knives I've seen in a while
jennyjj01 wrote:"I'm not in the least bit worried because I'm prepared: Are you?"
"All Things Strive" Gd Tak 'GarLondonpreppy wrote: At its core all prepping is, is making sure you're not down to your last sheet of loo roll when you really need a poo.
- Quercus-robur
- Posts: 297
- Joined: Sat Sep 21, 2013 8:35 pm
- Location: Cumbria
Re: couple knives i made
How long before you were making usable knives? Did you find the first few were for just learning techniques?MJ. wrote:it started out of curiosity back in April this year, picked up bits of information on how to do it on line and soon discovered theres much more to it. i found out that its relatively easy to make "a knife" but very very hard to make a "good" knife... frustratingly hard if im honest with a chance of ruining it at prettu much every stage. its the hidden work that makes the blade... preparation of the steel, heat treat, the tempering... in short its very hard.Quercus-robur wrote:Very impressive. How and where did you learn to make them? Was it easy?
Qr
have only made around 30 knives so far and hoping to get better.
Could you please recommend a basic kit for someone wanting to do the same? How much coin will be needed for a budget set up?
Cheers
Qr
Area 9 Coordinator and Resident
'At Spes Infracta'
'I'm as mad as hell and I'm not going to take this anymore'.
'At Spes Infracta'
'I'm as mad as hell and I'm not going to take this anymore'.
Re: couple knives i made
thank you, its done with a set of small files, you file it in at a 45 degree angle and add pigment to the epoxy when fitting the scales to fill the gaps. regretfully i dont own this one any more... its now residing in the highlands of Scotland with a deer stalker.
Re: couple knives i made
the first one i made turned out ok, didnt give it enough time tempering so ended up having remove the scales... lesson learned dont spend hours polishing or fit the scales till you know the heat treat and tempering are correct! with practice my bevel grinding got better and my blade/handle geometry has improve.Quercus-robur wrote:How long before you were making usable knives? Did you find the first few were for just learning techniques?MJ. wrote:it started out of curiosity back in April this year, picked up bits of information on how to do it on line and soon discovered theres much more to it. i found out that its relatively easy to make "a knife" but very very hard to make a "good" knife... frustratingly hard if im honest with a chance of ruining it at prettu much every stage. its the hidden work that makes the blade... preparation of the steel, heat treat, the tempering... in short its very hard.Quercus-robur wrote:Very impressive. How and where did you learn to make them? Was it easy?
Qr
have only made around 30 knives so far and hoping to get better.
Could you please recommend a basic kit for someone wanting to do the same? How much coin will be needed for a budget set up?
Cheers
Qr
steel wise its best stick with simple known carbon steels which can be heat treated at home. tool wise, you need a forge, this can be as simple as a barbecue and a hair dryer using lump wood charcoal and a quenching solution.
an angle grinder is a big help for roughing out profiles, if you keep an eye on lidl and aldi specials they have a 1200w angle grinder for £19.99 sometimes and its excellent... have been using the same. for bevel grinding its possible to build a jig for a file or you could start with a cheap (£80) 1x30 belt grinder using 40 grit and 120 grit ceramic belts (around £2 each)... theres lots to learn so time researching is necessary
you can sometimes buy peices of o1 tool steel online or you can experiment with unknown carbon steel old/vintage (non case hardened) files... tempering is guess work so start low ie 175c for a couple hours test and go again if still too hard upping the temperature maybe 20c at a time
would take me all day to explain everything but hope this helps