Ballock Knife
Click on the image to go to the gallery page with the full specs. and more pictures.
[ Linked Image ]

And here is a link to a video of the process:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MwVwfkcv968

This knife was a commission.

Let me know what you think.
Looks nicely done. I don't think I've seen a ferrule like that though, the ones I've seen pictures of have more shape to them, or don't have them at all.

You might want to fix the unfortunate typo on the image :lol:
I fixed the typo in the image.

Thanks for pointing that out.
Ben Potter wrote:
I fixed the typo in the image.

Thanks for pointing that out.


Darn! I missed it!

It looks like you cast the silver right on the wood?
The hilt fittings are cast in-place, which saves a lot of time over the lost wax method and also mounts the blade very tightly.
Ben Potter wrote:
The hilt fittings are cast in-place, which saves a lot of time over the lost wax method and also mounts the blade very tightly.


That's really interesting. I was wondering about that part of the video. Could you explain this process further? It looks like you form some sort of material around the blade to act as a simple mold? What is that material?

I really enjoyed the video.

Thanks,
Dustin
And with a 1763°F melting point, why does it not obliterate the wood?

M.
M. Eversberg II wrote:
And with a 1763°F melting point, why does it not obliterate the wood?

M.

I'm also wondering how he did it :wtf:

Im not sure if it would have worked for this particular project but there is an option to put heat resistent and absorbant material in the wood carvings. After you have put that in you can pour in the silver without damaging the wood.
I'm not sure if he has used this method or that its even possible for this, and if its possible is the fitting still tight and strong enough to hold the tang/blade.
M. Eversberg II wrote:
And with a 1763°F melting point, why does it not obliterate the wood?

M.


Those fittings aren't very big. They must cool off fast enough that they don't do much damage to the wood. If the outside mold is something conductive, that would help cool the silver, too.
Casting the fittings is one of the hardest parts of this type of knife.

First to wait till the full moon, carefully write your runes in a circle around the casting area, take mistletoe, motherwhort and oak leaves, toss them in to the fire and with a gold ladle...

Actually, it is all in the metallurgy.
The fact is that If you use 99.9 fine silver it would burn the handle (not to mention destroy the temper on the blade. But if you alloy the silver with tin it lowers the melting point enough that you can use it in this manner. That said, you must be very careful when you cast it as if you get it too hot it (the silver alloy) will cause the wood to smoke too much and cause voids in the fittings. It is hot enough to burn the wood and would except that the liquid metal doesn't allow oxygen to come in contact with it.
In fact you can (and though out history many cultures have) cast different metals in wood molds, As late as the end of last century (1960's) people were still using wooden bullet molds in some parts of the US (see Foxfire 5, UNC Charlotte, if I am not mistaken).
The "mold" is made of heavy cardboard ( NOT corrugated) and masking tape. There is an art to getting the mold just right, to thin and the metal cools too quickly and doesn't flow creating voids (necessitating a VERY difficult repair), too thick and the metal cools too slowly and burns the wood creating smoke voids and a loose fit(and the need to do it all over).
One again beautiful work. Clean!
Ben Potter wrote:
Casting the fittings is one of the hardest parts of this type of knife.

First to wait till the full moon, carefully write your runes in a circle around the casting area, take mistletoe, motherwhort and oak leaves, toss them in to the fire and with a gold ladle...

.



Oh! thats how they taught me to do it......

Page 1 of 1

Jump to:  
You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot vote in polls in this forum
You cannot attach files in this forum
You can download files in this forum




All contents © Copyright 2003-2006 myArmoury.com — All rights reserved
Discussion forums powered by phpBB © The phpBB Group
Switch to the Full-featured Version of the forum