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|  7th August 2023, 07:40 PM | #1 | 
| Member Join Date: Apr 2023 
					Posts: 39
				 |  Wootz ingot / true Damascus 
			
			Hello All,  Imagine having a terrible preserved wootz sword/saber etc. Should you be converting this into an ingot? Kind regards, | 
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|  7th August 2023, 07:52 PM | #2 | 
| EAAF Staff Join Date: Nov 2004 Location: Upstate New York, USA 
					Posts: 967
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			No.
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|  7th August 2023, 07:53 PM | #3 | 
| Member Join Date: Dec 2019 Location: Eastern Sierra 
					Posts: 511
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			Pictures please. I'm chismoso!
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|  7th August 2023, 11:06 PM | #4 | 
| Member Join Date: Apr 2023 
					Posts: 39
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			Hypothetical idea of course. It popped in head as I watched my tulwars / talwars.
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|  8th August 2023, 12:36 AM | #5 | 
| Member Join Date: Sep 2021 Location: Leiden, NL 
					Posts: 617
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|  8th August 2023, 05:02 PM | #6 | 
| Member Join Date: Dec 2019 Location: Eastern Sierra 
					Posts: 511
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			Thanks for the picture. Honestly from what I understand of the chemistry of the process I do not believe that if you took these three blades and melted them into a liquid state to create a new ingot that the resultant steel would display a wootz pattern. The possible exception (my theory) would be cutting them into small pieces, placing them into a crucible with leaves, glass, maybe some charcoal dust and sealing the crucible. Then heat the crucible slowly to the perfect temperature, I have seen several theories on what that is, and slowly cooling that over a long period. Basically, recreating the process in which the crystalline structure was formed in the first place. Interesting idea, but historically destructive. If this was my dream, I would be more inclined to repeat the Al Pendray experiment of tracking down an old mine used in historical wootz production so that you had a better chance of the correct chemical composition. Getting together 80 kg minimum of ore and processing that. Probably 320 0r 400 kg would be a better goal in that would give you 4-5 chances to get the process right given you could properly forge the wootz once it was an ingot. Interestingly enough, I discovered an iron deposit (mostly large chunks of iron oxide mixed with sand and trace gold) recently at work that I have been collecting and storing in the hope that someday I will have spare time and health enough to finish the project that I dreamed of with my grandfather when I was 12. Ironically, I would be at roughly the same age he was when we dreamed of making wootz by the time I have the time I get around to the experiment   Good luck in your adventures, IP Last edited by Interested Party; 8th August 2023 at 05:51 PM. Reason: sentence structure | 
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|  8th August 2023, 05:35 PM | #7 | 
| Member Join Date: Apr 2023 
					Posts: 39
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			Thank you for your extensive reply.  The high risks of destroying or changing the wootz properties are off putting. | 
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