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			I keep hearing talk of wootz being melted and cast ,this has puzzeled me since to the best of my knowledge this would homogenize the metal and detroy the different layers of steel.So how does it work?
		 
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
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		#2 | 
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			its a good question, and one i look forward to 'spectating'. 
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	jim, i think that we need both here. anns historically academic anaysis would be great, but also greg is as hands-on talented as they come, and i would like to hear more from him. i think if we tickle his curiosity enough to get him to expand his opinion, we will be pleasantly surprised at the results :-)  | 
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		#3 | 
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			I'm thinking that it's easier to get a crucible to maintain it's structural integrity at high heat if it is round, and not too tall.  
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	Also, the difficulty in forging out the metal is a problem with all ingots, the first stages are the difficult ones and would exist with either round or long ones, so the benefit is not as great as it would seem. Round, compact ingots also might be less prone to casting flaws, bubbles and/or slag inclusions, due to the surface area to mass ratio - it really sucks when you spend a bunch of hours forging something out and then find a flaw. What do you think?  | 
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		#4 | 
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				Location: 30 miles north of Bangkok, 20 miles south of Ayuthaya, Thailand 
				
				
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			I had tried a couple wootz smelting with no success. And what I can tell you is that button shape crucible 's much more easy to work with.  
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	First of all, oxygen protection is a must for wootz smelting. In wootz furnace, the crucibles are required to be arranged at the combustion zone (highest heat, ~1400 C). Since atmospheric condition 's not totally reduction, molten steel surface need to be protected and minimized. The second reason is for the crucible 's stability, as Jeff mentioned. Even modern refractory get soften a bit at that temperature. Wootz crucibles are need to be heated at 1200-1300 C for several hours. Good design 's required or crucibles will be fail (very messy, 'liv me). Third reason 's also ceramic thing. The fact that the higher refractory materials has lower plasticity and green strength 's another major constrain for their shape. You cannot make a very complex shape. And cup-shape crucible 's difficult enough for hand-forming pieces. The forth reason; dendritic steel 's VERY difficult to forge down, especially when heat 's required to be under 800 C. Even with annealed button, smiths may require 30-40 reds (heat cycles) to forge button flat. That 'coz of dendritic structure 's required to be broken into small. And after the button has been "forge soften", only another 10-20 reds to go to bar or other shape. If the metal was made as bar, 50+ heat cycles still need for shaping. The metal cannot be cast to shape 'coz the "as cast" material 's too brittle for any application.  | 
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		#5 | 
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			Hi all, sorry for my absence. 
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
			Thank you for the answers witch I find very interesting. As the one who knows little about the subject, I have an additional question. From the answers you have written I understand, that the bigger the ingots were the more difficult it was to make them. As far as I know the ingots varied in size from a few hundred grams to about 3 kg, but most were made for making two sword blades out of an ingot. If the big ingots were so difficult to make, why did they not make the small ones only? Is it possible to forge left over from two different ingots together and get a good result? How close it the wooz pattern in the ingots made in the same furnace? Last edited by Jens Nordlunde; 4th April 2006 at 03:36 PM.  | 
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		#6 | |||
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			 Quote: 
	
 Plus, as anyone who is making the stuff can tell you, many of the 'two-sword' ingots get to be 'one sword'- or 'several knife'-sized by the end of the forging process - if you only made ingots big enough for a sword, you'd end up with a lot of knives, and maybe not enough swords! Quote: 
	
 Quote: 
	
 I find a fair degree of uniformity in patterns within an ingot, but each ingot varies in pattern depending mainly on carbon content and solidification rate. Justin - this article explains the patterning in wootz steel - http://www.tms.org/pubs/journals/JOM...even-9809.html  | 
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		#7 | 
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			Hi Jeff, thank you for your interesting answer. 
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	Since you write that a ‘two sword’ ingot easily could end up as a few daggers ingot, there must be a big difference of how much slag there it in the different ingots?  | 
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