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This is a discussion on Laminating within the Swords forums, part of the Bladesmithing category; Originally Posted by FERRARIVS Has anyone ever tried making a laminated blade- one with a mild steel core and tool ...


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  #11 (permalink)  
Old 04-10-2008, 03:07 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by FERRARIVS View Post
Has anyone ever tried making a laminated blade- one with a mild steel core and tool steel edges? <snip>

Matt
San Mai translates 3 layers, how is this NOT san mai ? and if you read my URL it was general info about welding the metals.
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  #12 (permalink)  
Old 04-10-2008, 03:14 PM
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Lets see I would do that as 1 core piece + 1 edge piece equals 2 not 3, right?

San Mai is used to refer to a sandwich construction with lower carbon bread and a higher carbon meat. Not the literal translation but how it is used by bladesmiths.

This is more like a piece of bread with a lower carbon center and a higher carbon crust.

Much tricker to weld in some ways, particularly the point region. (I remember Al Pendray welding up a blade made from alternating wootz and patternwelded chevrons at Quad-State one year which is like the point problem only more so)

BTW on your website you mention wootz as being medieval but never that pattern welding was early medieval as well, also the glossary doesn't have an entry for pattern welding and I would suggest the term "central asia" instead of India when describing the origins of wootz. (BTW have you picked up a copy of Dr Feuerbach's dissertation on "Crucible Steel in Central Asia" very interesting.) Also if that is a double lunged bellow in that picture it would date to the renaissance and not to the middle ages---came into smithing from the gold smiths that were using them first while the medieval smith was using paired single lunged bellows; but I'm sure you know all that and it was just a bobble in the description.

Will you be at Quad-State this year? I hope to drive in from NM for it.
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Old 04-10-2008, 05:43 PM
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His post said edges plural, as did the quote I included above. And I am aware he is talking Oreo cookie (soft middle hard outer) that does not change the facts for forge welding.

The bellows was made as a double to work better at events, as I am lazy when it comes to pumping that all weekend long. Blame Mr Moran as it was his, I bought it from him a few years back. If I could get away with it I would power it with hamsters in Wheels, those little guys have boundless energy.

I will be at Tipton Indiana for the IBA thing first weekend in June, Don't know anything about quad cities, start a thread and tell about it ?

I do not have all the answers, in fact I have only a few, I was trying to help a guy that stated he was having troubles in welding some layers. Some time back I wrote that at my web site to help people understand what is happening, Sorry if you disagree.
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Old 04-10-2008, 07:24 PM
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Quad-State is the largest annual smithing conference in America held around the end of September in Troy OH---about half an hour from Dayton.

Most smiths know about it; folks will be coming in from Canada, NM, US Virgin Islands---a lot of us get together there to meet; it's sort of like the Pennsic of Blacksmithing with great tailgating too!
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Old 04-10-2008, 10:27 PM
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Oh Yes... the southern Ohio thing. I do know about it, BUT thats the same weekend as the Metea Ren Fair I work. They moved the date a few years ago, when Fisher's event moved theirs to "our weekend" , and so now its are same time as the S. Ohio event. As the Only smith as this ren-faire, I don't want to lose my spot there
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Old 04-11-2008, 12:27 PM
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Sad, if it's a multi weekend fair, could you get an apprentice to do the show while you visit Quad-State?

When I lived in OH the only year I missed it was when I was out of the country; now I'm in NM I still try to make it every other year---it's that good. Back when I last attended IBA's hammer in; Quad-State was about 10 times larger and the tailgating was unbelievable---I had a friend from Canada come down just to buy stuff to open a smithing school.

I probably should have sent you those website suggestions by pm; sorry.
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Old 04-11-2008, 01:37 PM
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No problem, and you are correct, I was also made aware that I need to explain distal taper too.

There are many things I am too opinionated about. (and I should not be) The web page comments are good for others to see too, as not everything on the web is totally accurate, and we all can benefit from scrutiny. Even the most l earned person, can make mistakes, we should always question what we read, and verify if it is the truth, nothing wrong with that.


and the Ren Fair is only 2 days.
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Old 04-14-2008, 12:52 AM
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Thanks for all the suggestions guys.

For clarity, I'm fairly new to forging in general, but have got the hang of many of the forming techniqes and I've done some successful welds (a handful). Not long after I posted my question I was able to weld the HC steel I have (1045) to the mild quite well- it's very strong. I hammered it a good deal and didn't break the weld as well. So at least that aspect I know I can do, and actually a variation of the sandwich idea did occur to me at about 0430 on Friday- using two strips of tool steel for each edge rather than just one. Welding one to one side of the mild steel, then flipping and repeating. Similar in effect to the split-and-insert, which I had considered but was concerned would be rather more difficult for me at least, and just the opposite pattern (HC into MS rather than MS into HC) as the 'sandwich'. The main issue it seems I'm left with is holding everything together- it seems tack welds are commonly used by guys for this, so I'll have to rustle up a 110V arc welder...

Last edited by FERRARIVS; 04-14-2008 at 01:02 AM.
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Old 04-14-2008, 12:55 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by imagedude View Post
The addition of carbon lowers the temperature required for forge welding. It is a lot easier to make pattern welded steel from medium/high carbon steels than it is to weld MS to carbon steel. Here's some I made from CS70 (1070) and 15N20.
That's interesting- I'd have thought the opposite about carbon. And that's a beautiful piece. The blade I'm trying to replicate, however, is a simple Roman weapon that only has high-carbon edges welded to a low carbon body, so I definitely have to work with HC and MS together. Pattern welding will be another project
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Old 04-14-2008, 12:22 PM
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Some of the roman weapons were plain wrought iron too! "The Metallography or Early Ferrous Edge Tools and Edged Weapons" has an example IIRC.

The Romans also used piling as well.

As for the lower temp deal. Think of cast iron---melts a lot lower than steel does and the difference is only carbon content, cast iron has a lot more carbon than high carbon steel! Or high school chemistry---the more crud is in something the lower it's melting point is and higher it's boiling point. One example is solder: add tin to the lead and the MP goes down.
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