ricky_arthur
Well-Known Member
I have 5 smaller knives in the works and 2 of them I promised to have ready for Valentines day. So I got all 5 ready for heat treat. Did 3 normalization cycles. Quenched the first one, no problems. Quenched the second (the only one that was Hollow ground) And it warped all to heck. I threw it back in the forge to anneal it and got the 3rd ready. It was the largest of the 5. It warped too.
Since both were promised by tomorrow, I couldn't risk breaking them by straightening them after quench. So I annealed both, straightened, and re quenched. The larger one came out good, the hollow ground one warped again only not quite as bad. I decided to temper them all and see if I could straighten it after tempering.
So after temper I took them all to the shed to clean them up. I noticed one of the others had a very slight curve right in the center between the blade and handle. I walked over to the anvil and tap, tap, tap. Nothing, tap, tap tap...Nothing
TAP!
Danggit!
I know everyone loves 1084, but I never had a 1095 blade warp on me, I'm about to switch back.
At least 1 out of 3 with the 1084 will warp. Even small ones.
anyway, I decided it was a good opportunity to check grain size and so I cut it in half, and was pleasantly surprised. A pic is hard to see because the light makes it look funny but in person the grain is small enough that it is hard to see grain with the naked eye.
I was wondering how The grain would look using my heat treat method and now I know. I guess it was worth throwing about 3 hours of work in the garbage.
So after temper I took them all to the shed to clean them up. I noticed one of the others had a very slight curve right in the center between the blade and handle. I walked over to the anvil and tap, tap, tap. Nothing, tap, tap tap...Nothing
TAP!

Danggit!
I know everyone loves 1084, but I never had a 1095 blade warp on me, I'm about to switch back.
anyway, I decided it was a good opportunity to check grain size and so I cut it in half, and was pleasantly surprised. A pic is hard to see because the light makes it look funny but in person the grain is small enough that it is hard to see grain with the naked eye.
I was wondering how The grain would look using my heat treat method and now I know. I guess it was worth throwing about 3 hours of work in the garbage.