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A. Gallo
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Posted: Mon 04 Apr, 2011 12:55 am Post subject: How was hot-peening done historically? |
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For example if you watch the Albion "how its made" video and listen to many other bladesmiths they say they use a concentrated gas torch on the end of the tang and peen like that. That way they don't spread heat through the blade and destroy the post-quench hardness.
I've heard both cold peening and hot penning are historically accurate (true/false?), if so, how did a medieval swordsmith manage a hot peen? They were working with large, well-dissipated heat sources, nothing that could heat a 1-3 inch spot to forging temps while the rest of the sword remained room temperature.
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A. Gallo
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Posted: Mon 04 Apr, 2011 1:02 am Post subject: |
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Was the pommel installed BEFORE quenching..?
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Viktor Abrahamson
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Posted: Mon 04 Apr, 2011 1:29 am Post subject: |
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Itīs no problem really.
Deflect the heat from the areas you donīt want to heat.
A piece of thick sheat Iron for example.
And wrap the areas you donīt want to heat in wet cloth and work fast.
/Viktor
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A. Gallo
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Posted: Mon 04 Apr, 2011 1:57 am Post subject: |
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So the heat doesn't "conduct" down the blade much?
Even with my 3/4" burners propane forge I worry about undesired tempering in steel within proximity to a 'hot spot' I'm doing
It seems like it would be really difficult in a coal or similar forge, back in the day
The wet cloth is definitely a good idea, I must try that
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Matthijs Witsenburg
Location: The Hague, Netherlands Joined: 03 Jan 2011
Posts: 33
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Posted: Mon 04 Apr, 2011 2:22 pm Post subject: |
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Heating the last inch or so of the tang in a coal fire without significantly the rest of the blade is no problem. The steel conducts heat, but not very quickly. Heating a plain carbon steel upto 200C (418 fF) or so will not significantly mess with the temper.
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Chad Arnow
myArmoury Team
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Posted: Mon 04 Apr, 2011 3:22 pm Post subject: |
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Another thing to consider: a little heat in the tang might soften that area in a beneficial way. Some tangs were less hard, unhardened altogether, or even made of softer iron.
ChadA
http://chadarnow.com/
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