The good: The head itself is differentially hardened and the edge is quite nice. The pole provided is a nice piece of hard ash. I could see the differential hardening via the fact that I used a Dremel wheel to grind the black paint off by hand. Had to use the Dremel because of the complex curves in the axe head. Also I found that almost the entire hammer head is through hardened. Overall I was very pleasantly surprised with the quality of the steel here and - for the price you can't beat it as I could take this down to the scrap yard and get my money back simply because of the weight and current price of steel. (Not to mention the ash pole which originally was 75 inches long) It takes a nice edge and holds it which is important for an axe. Nothing is worse imo than a soft axe head that is dulled chopping wood and has to be sharpened after every session of use. Not this one though..............
The bad. As a period piece you might get away saying this is a 16th c. axe, but its overall makeup is a bit non-historic, given the size and shape of the hammerhead and the socket. Plus I wanted to actually use it so I used the modern bolts to secure it.
The specs
2000 grams. A bit heavy for one handed use. But swings and recovers nicely in two hands. I suppose one could cut the socket off the head and that would lighten it by about 100-150 grams. Don't get any ideas about cutting off the hammer end though - its through hardened and you would really have to work to do that
Length is 32 inches the way I decided to finish it.
The axe head is about 6 inches wide and 6 inches long. Nicely shaped
The hammer is four inches long and is a four prong - 2.5 inches by 2.5 inches
I cut the length down to just where the POB would be about near the end of the socket, about 6 inches down from the top and 4 inches below the actual axe head. This gives it a good feel in the hand, yet at 2 kg, it packs quite a punch and pop when you hit with it. I drank too much Talisker one night and did some carving on the handle and added some leather strap glued and nailed down with some bosses left over from a targe project. I cold blued the axe head.
As always, all comments welcome. I bought two of these and am thinking of what to do with the second one. If you are looking for an axe this isn't a bad one and you can't beat it for the price. I suppose you could mount this on another store bought stick and use the ash pole for another polearm too..... TR
