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#1 |
Member
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Room 101, Glos. UK
Posts: 4,224
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Nepali Kamis (blacksmiths) routinely heat treat their blades with boiling water as a 'coolant' from a tea pot on the critical heated edge to harden that, leaving the residual heat to temper the spine a bit softer. It takes them years of practice to learn how to do it right. Better they should bend rather than snap, you can bend a soft spine one back to workable in the field, but snapped blade can't be fixed there.
Last edited by kronckew; 3rd October 2019 at 08:51 AM. |
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#2 | |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: California
Posts: 1,036
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A friend who makes knives once traveled to Thailand to see contemporary makers of daabs and other blades at work, and he reported that smiths use a rather long trough-like forge so that the edge side gets hotter, and they quench by immersing just the edge in the water bath, being careful to include the point on long curved blades, and then after some moments dunk the entire thing underwater. As you describe, it's all about technique and timing. 19th cent. Victorian writers have a low opinion of Burmese blades, but I've found, from actual polishing, that the better ones have a very precise and crisp hamon with a line of crystallization that is comparable to a lot of Japanese work. One would think that some sort of clay heat-sink, à la japonaise, was used but I've not been able to verify this. BTW, the use of these clay coatings was mentioned by the Persian scientist Mohammed bin Ahmed al-Biruni in his treatise On Iron (10th century) and highly visible differential heat treat is evident on wootz shamshir blades made in Iran through the 18th cent. |
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#3 |
Member
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Room 101, Glos. UK
Posts: 4,224
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The nimcha above looks remarkably like mine, with a blade in better condition.
http://www.vikingsword.com/vb/showth...ghlight=nimcha |
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