June 20, 201114 yr Heres a special order Lisa filled a while back and documented the process for the buyer.. Just thought we would post them..This is going to be a bearded, polled bag axe..Used mostly for hunt'n chore's..The body is 1045(1" x 1" square) and the cutting bit will be 1095fg(so as to hold an edge to skin with)..You'll notice in the pics everything is done by hand..I always liked doing it that way but to be honest we dont have a mill or a lathe or a power hammer so we dont have a choice anyway We'd use them if we did but we dont :grumpy: Here we forgot to take a pic of upsetting the end but we have upset it and forged a very rough blade shape.The reason we upset it is to have enough mass for a bearded head..Unless the blade is 3x as wide as the width of the eye body its not bearded to me .Then we have it in a hold hardy tool so we can split the head to accept the wedge of 1095fg.. Here is the "blade" split with the cutting bit in it ready to weld up.. Here is the first welding pass..We do two-three passes.. Here we use a spring fuller to fuller the blade between where the eye will be and the rest of the blade..Just makes it easier to control the blade forging. Here we have measured and marked both sides of the head after cooling with a cold chisel. This is where we will hot slit the eye.. Here we have started. Go thru BOTH sides and then you can meet in the middle.. After you have done a few bucket full of these it will meet perfectly in the middle like this Here we have a flat drift thru the eye to forge the ears on. Again here we use a spring fuller..Later when we drift it to shape we will fuller some more on the eye drfit. Well heres the rest of the pics.After the eye was drifted to sharp. We didnt get pics of staining the haft. We'll do a post about the maple by itself later.. Here its starting to be forged out.. Over the horn to set the blade profile.. The blade pretty muchs set and ready to clean up..We will forge the edge bevels in after the cutout is done so we can leave a forge finish..The blade has to be clean and level to do the cutout right.. The head is cleaned up somewhat and the holes set for the cut out..In this case a deer track (buck of course) after this its all elbow grease and files.. After a long time and sore elbow heres the deer track.. Stamping the poll... Well this is it..During heat treat we did forge the bevel and left a forge finish per request..It was edge hardened and tempered and the hammer poll was also heat treated like a regular hammer(after being trimmed to length).. 4 5/8" wide bearded cutting edge. Hair poppin sharp.On a 15" curly maple haft.
June 21, 201114 yr That's the first time that I have ever seen a deer track cut out in an axe. GREAT job. Really a beauty. Thanks for sharing. :D
June 21, 201114 yr Fantastic work. And thanks for sharing the step-by-step. It's great to see a bearded "user" instead of just repro stuff. That is a nice one. Don
July 28, 201114 yr Very nice work you two! I see a happy customer in your future. Have you tried a Brian Brazeal type punch? We got our first experience with one last weekend and it's slicker than wet ice for getting the slit from both sides. His technique makes it almost a sure thing. Pics and I believe a how to are posted here, a search should find em for you. Frosty the Lucky.
July 28, 201114 yr Being a weapon enthusiast, it gets me giddy seeing that as a finished product, that is one amazing looking axe. it has a really rugged look to it even though it's obviously a completed work.
August 2, 201114 yr Author any chance you could make another one similar to that for me? You can give us a shout thru email. Maybe we can help you out. :)
August 2, 201114 yr Author Thanks Frosty, yes I have used one of thoses style punches. They are good,and worked well for me. I guess Im just too use to these flat thin slitters..Ive made so many that I just keep going back to my old way of doing it..
August 2, 201114 yr But Don; all my bearded "repros" are *users*! They used them then I use them now.
August 3, 201114 yr Ah, perhaps I should have said "wall hanger" instead of "repro". Either way, it's just great to see a historic (or historically influenced) piece made that can perform as well, or sometimes better, than the originals.
August 3, 201114 yr I'm generally cutting kindling at my forge with a bearded blade and none of them have a "wall hanger" polish to them. I like *using* blades! (Of course I remember digging an impromptu firepit with a pattern welded knife and seeing folks eyes bulge out a bit---I made it what could I do to it that I couldn't fix!)
August 11, 201114 yr KYBOY,dumb question time for you. In the first picture you are using a homemade vice on top of the anvil to hold the axe head. I have seen these used before but do not know what they are called. do you know?
August 11, 201114 yr thank you very much for the in progress photos...it really helps to see the steps
August 15, 201114 yr Author KYBOY,dumb question time for you. In the first picture you are using a homemade vice on top of the anvil to hold the axe head. I have seen these used before but do not know what they are called. do you know? Sorry, I dont honestly know what its called. I saw one used in a video once..Went to the shop and made one..been very handy..
August 17, 201114 yr Sorry, I dont honestly know what its called. I saw one used in a video once..Went to the shop and made one..been very handy.. looks handy, especially for me in the shop alone. and nice to not abuse my vice.
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.