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Old 2nd March 2005, 01:34 PM   #1
Jens Nordlunde
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Gene, the ingot you show on the link seems to be round and flat. The one I saw a picture of was shaped like the round one you show on a picture on this topic, but larger - I think. The writing was on top of it, and looked, as I recall it, like the writing on the one you show on the link.

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Old 2nd March 2005, 06:39 PM   #2
Ann Feuerbach
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Thanks Gene for the generous offer! I will take you up on it as soon as I have time to spend doing research. Right now they would just be used as paper weights, until I finish lecturing this term. I will be looking for ingots and blades to include in the book. Where did you get the ingots from?
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Old 7th March 2005, 02:49 PM   #3
Jens Nordlunde
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A small knife I have, in a scabbard together with a katar, is very magnetic, but the katar is not.
The picture to the left shows the tip of the blade, and the one to the right the compass at the base of the blade. The small knife is made in the first quarter of 1600, the katar is newer.
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Old 7th March 2005, 04:02 PM   #4
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When magnetic moments are positioned alongside a line (good approximation for thin swords), there are basically two stable configurations - all magnetic moments are oriented along the line, parallel to each other, or they are all perpendicular to the line, and anti-parallel to each other, i.e. +-+-.

What you have most likely shows that you physically have different steels (most likely phases or chemistry) at the tip and for the rest of the blade, so you've these two macrodomains anti-parallel to each other.
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Old 7th March 2005, 04:28 PM   #5
Jens Nordlunde
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Rivkin, thank you for your answer. I understand what the words, but I have a feeling, that I don't understand the whole meaning. I understand, that when we have come as far as we have, and want to go further, the language is likely to get more complicated. Is it possible for you to explain it in another way?
Here is a picture of the katar and the little knife.
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Old 8th March 2005, 04:25 AM   #6
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In a very approximate manner:

When magnets are dropped into a narrow, long box, they naturally prefer either to align all parallel to each other parallel to the long side of the box, or anti-parallel to each other (with anti-parallel polarities) and perpendicular to the long side of the box. In both cases the magnets will lie parallel to the magnetic field created by other magnets.

So your configuration is most likely due to the case that at the tip you have some anisotropy , most likely due to changes in steel's chemistry or physics (phases).

Just my 2c.
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Old 8th March 2005, 03:11 PM   #7
Jens Nordlunde
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Andrew, thank you for making this tread a sticker. Some collectors collect weapons and keep it at that, a lot of others are also interested in the ‘background’ story, how was the ingots made, why did the pattern appear/disappear, why did smiths have difficulties in forging the ingots, why are some of the blade magnetic, things like this line. I think the thread ‘Magnetic weapons’ answers a few of these questions, and hope we can get more questions answered in the future.

Thank you Rivkin, for ‘translating’ you mail for me – I think I now understand what you mean.
The ‘uncomplicated’ subject ‘magnetism’, has proved itself to be anything but uncomplicated, but I find the discussion very interesting, and hope, the other members do too – I for one has learned quite a lot, although I did not understand all the mails.

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Old 31st March 2005, 07:20 PM   #8
Battara
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Hey Jens, what type of knife is that next to the katar and how old is it?
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