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I Forge Iron

A forged belt camp axe/hatchet in curly maple..(WIP pics)


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We took pics of this last build so I thought we would post them.Lisa sold this one the other day..
Start off with a 1" x 1 1/2" bar of mild steel..
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First thing to do is make the eye..Here are the tools we use..A hand held hot slitter and a hammer.
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Just started..
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A "in the fire" pic..
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Hot cut through both sides..
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Opening the eye..
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A spring swage in the hammer for drawing down the ears..
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Ears drawn down..
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Eye drifted to shape..
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Poll cut to accept a cutting bit of 1075 steel..
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All welded up with the edge trimmed away..You can see the 1075 between the layers of mild steel..
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Shot of the eye..
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Ready to anneal and grind on..
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Getting ready to heat treat...
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Heat treated,ground and ready to start assembling..
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Heres a few finished pics..
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I agree with you for the most part..Curly wood is weaker across the grain by its very nature and not as strong as straight grain..Customers have been wanting curly maple for the most part lately and you know the old saying "Customer is always right"..When your making for the wall hanger crowd and reenactor crowd if you dont work with curly woods you dont sell much..

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Ok, yes you leave the drift in while forging down the ears..Its the flat drift. One used for opening up the initial hole.
yes, my hot cuts are square(with rounded corners)..Ive tried the other style and they work fine but this style seems to work better for us..Before I busted my back I could hot slit a 1" square bar of high carbon steel in two heats..One of those "aint broke, aint gonna try and fix it" things..Takes Lisa more heats of course..I cant really say their is an advantage to mine at all, we'er just practised with it..
I think that flat drift happens to be 4140..The final drift is just mild steel.

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  • 1 month later...

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