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Leo Todeschini
Industry Professional
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Michal Plezia
Industry Professional
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Posted: Thu 08 Oct, 2009 1:53 am Post subject: |
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Maybe you should use a harder steel like nc6 (C-1,4%; Mn-0,6%; Si-0,25%; Cr-1,5%, V-0,2% , 62-65hrc after hardening, 60-62 hrc after tempering)? Old files could be good. You can try them before reforging
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Polish Guild of Knifemakers
The sword is a weapon for killing, the art of the sword is the art of killing. No matter what fancy words you use or what titles you put to
it that is the only truth.
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Jeroen Zuiderwijk
Industry Professional
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Jason Mather
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Posted: Thu 08 Oct, 2009 4:47 am Post subject: |
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I have had good results with 5160, O-1, files, and torsion springs from garage door openers. What works for me is to heat them up red hot and let them cool 2-3 times then harden in water. Little or no temper. Sometimes I draw back non striking parts of the striker like handle parts or decorative bits. Just like everything else, once you get one right its a no-brainer.
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Leo Todeschini
Industry Professional
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Posted: Thu 08 Oct, 2009 9:35 am Post subject: |
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Thanks for the replies - I have been off fiddling.
I think Jeroen hit the spot with keeping the flint sharp, I have never realised how crucial this is and makes all the difference.
for my 45 minutes playing I have decided that files are definitley best and can work with a blunter flint. My usual steel is from an old file and so I think I have been spoiled and can be lazy with needing a sharp flint.
Surprisingly of the steels I have around, 0-1 was a good second best, which I find surprising and although the flint did need to be sharp, it worked very well.
Many thanks for the tips.
Tod
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Jared Smith
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Posted: Thu 08 Oct, 2009 2:26 pm Post subject: |
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Does anyone know what hardness is considered ideal for a striker? I know that the flint needs to be able to cut it, but am not really sure if the steel needs quenching and drawing to reach some optimal hardness. (If the conversion chart I looked at was right, flint/quartz is Mohs scale 7, Vickers 1161, Rockwell C near 71.) At least with something like 1095, as quenched Rockwell could be 65 and would be very tough on the flint. I would have expected the striker to have been heated after quenching to something like 300 or 400 F with a Rockwell C closer to 50 being targeted so that the flint would cut it more easily.
Absence of evidence is not necessarily evidence of absence!
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Ken Nelson
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Posted: Thu 08 Oct, 2009 6:33 pm Post subject: |
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straight high carbon steels, with maybe manganese are my preferred steels for strikers. I have a supply of 1.4C W1 drill rods that I keep for strikers. A .8%C and a 1.2%C steel can be at the same hardness, the 1.2% will generally give a better shower. O1 at .85-.9%C works well. After hardening, I only temper to 250 deg max. this will keep the striker from cracking the first time you drop it on a rock, but does not affect the hardness. Keeping a good sharp flint helps, as does practice.
"Live and learn, or you don't live long" L. Long
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