Grizzly Bear
Well-Known Member
Hey Guys,
I need some advise.
Does it help to roughen the 440C knife blank and the burl wood scales before I try and epoxy them on for better surface area or should I leave them smooth for better adhesion to each other; the kind of adhesion that you get when you put two pieces of glass together with a little moisture between them. You can't get them apart unless you slide them off of each other.
I have made 4 previous knives by buying blades and attaching 1 w/cord, 2 w/kingwood and 1 with buckeye burl wood. They came out nice, very nice for the buckeye burl wood knife.
I am going to do my first stock removal grind. You can tell by my next question that I don't know much about what I am about to undertake.
How far do you take the grind down to the final form before you heat treat it? I have read that you don't want to take it down too far because the heat treat will really warp a blade that is too thin at the edge. I want to take the grind down as far as I dare so that I don't have to grind so much on hardened steel (440C).
Would it be best to do as much grinding as possible in the annealed state or is it just the facts that you cut out your blade in the annealed state and do the edge grind in the hardened state?
Thanks so much for you help. I don't want to screw up my first try if I can gleam enough knowledge from you guys to avoid at least some of my screw ups.
Thanks for your help.
Grizzly Bear
I need some advise.
Does it help to roughen the 440C knife blank and the burl wood scales before I try and epoxy them on for better surface area or should I leave them smooth for better adhesion to each other; the kind of adhesion that you get when you put two pieces of glass together with a little moisture between them. You can't get them apart unless you slide them off of each other.
I have made 4 previous knives by buying blades and attaching 1 w/cord, 2 w/kingwood and 1 with buckeye burl wood. They came out nice, very nice for the buckeye burl wood knife.
I am going to do my first stock removal grind. You can tell by my next question that I don't know much about what I am about to undertake.
How far do you take the grind down to the final form before you heat treat it? I have read that you don't want to take it down too far because the heat treat will really warp a blade that is too thin at the edge. I want to take the grind down as far as I dare so that I don't have to grind so much on hardened steel (440C).
Would it be best to do as much grinding as possible in the annealed state or is it just the facts that you cut out your blade in the annealed state and do the edge grind in the hardened state?
Thanks so much for you help. I don't want to screw up my first try if I can gleam enough knowledge from you guys to avoid at least some of my screw ups.
Thanks for your help.
Grizzly Bear