Howdy, folks. Been a busy, productive year, and not as much time has
been spent on forums as I used to. But I have had a couple of
interesting projects I wanted to share. They are the two largest carcass
splitters I've made so far, one completed in February and one in
August.
The first was a commission from a chef who owns multiple restaurants who
wanted as large a carcass splitter as I could make as a gift for a
friend of his. The second was a commission from a fellow who butchers a
lot of hogs. Both started out as bars of 5/16" x 4" 80CrV2 steel, and
both ended up with hemp cord over neoprene handle wraps and Boltaron
sheaths. And both were hair-shaving sharp when shipped.
The first one was forged as close to shape as possible with my power
hammer, with only minimal cleanup grinding along the edge profile before
grinding and filing the bevel to final dimensions. It ended up with a
blade just under 20" long, 5 3/4" wide at the widest, 41 1/4" overall
length, and a weight of 8.22 pounds, a good 3 pounds more than my
previous largest carcass splitter.
In comparison with a "small" carcass splitter that is more like a 15"
blade, 15" tang, and around 4 lb weight, and with a 6' 2" Sasquatch for
scale.
The second one was forged as close to final dimensions as I could on my
power hammer, but the end was trimmed and the spine had minimal cleanup
grinding. It isn't quite as wide, but is larger in all other ways at
just over 20" blade length, 5 1/2" wide, and 44" overall lenth, with a
weight just over 9 pounds.
It picked up some extra texture from sitting a few days in a mixture of
vinegar that had more 30% acidity in it than I realized (most of the
mixture was 9% or 5%). Usually the vinegar eats the scale off without
affecting the steel; this time it definitely added texture.
In comparison with a 15" bladed bush sword that weighed just under 1.33 lbs prior to stock removal:
Sasquatch for scale.
Gotta say, it does nothing to help you hitch hike, even if you show a
little leg! I had just finished demonstrating how it could shave hair,
too!
More details, process video and pics, and general silliness in this video:
The
first was a commission from a chef who owns multiple restaurants who
wanted as large a carcass splitter as I could make as a gift for a
friend of his. The second was a commission from a fellow who butchers a
lot of hogs. Both started out as bars of 5/16" x 4" 80CrV2 steel, and
both ended up with hemp cord over neoprene handle wraps and Boltaron
sheaths. And both were hair-shaving sharp when shipped.
The
first one was forged as close to shape as possible with my power
hammer, with only minimal cleanup grinding along the edge profile before
grinding and filing the bevel to final dimensions. It ended up with a
blade just under 20" long, 5 3/4" wide at the widest, 41 1/4" overall
length, and a weight of 8.22 pounds, a good 3 pounds more than my
previous largest carcass splitter.
The
second one was forged as close to final dimensions as I could on my
power hammer, but the end was trimmed and the spine had minimal cleanup
grinding. It isn't quite as wide, but is larger in all other ways at
just over 20" blade length, 5 1/2" wide, and 44" overall lenth, with a
weight just over 9 pounds.
It
picked up some extra texture from sitting a few days in a mixture of
vinegar that had more 30% acidity in it than I realized (most of the
mixture was 9% or 5%). Usually the vinegar eats the scale off without
affecting the steel; this time it definitely added texture.
More details, process video and pics, and general silliness in this video:
[MEDIA=youtube]SrEF1P5Qdh8[/MEDIA]
Howdy,
folks. Been a busy, productive year, and not as much time has been
spent on forums as I used to. But I have had a couple of interesting
projects I wanted to share. They are the two largest carcass splitters
I've made so far, one completed in February and one in August.
The
first was a commission from a chef who owns multiple restaurants who
wanted as large a carcass splitter as I could make as a gift for a
friend of his. The second was a commission from a fellow who butchers a
lot of hogs. Both started out as bars of 5/16" x 4" 80CrV2 steel, and
both ended up with hemp cord over neoprene handle wraps and Boltaron
sheaths. And both were hair-shaving sharp when shipped.
The
first one was forged as close to shape as possible with my power
hammer, with only minimal cleanup grinding along the edge profile before
grinding and filing the bevel to final dimensions. It ended up with a
blade just under 20" long, 5 3/4" wide at the widest, 41 1/4" overall
length, and a weight of 8.22 pounds, a good 3 pounds more than my
previous largest carcass splitter.
The
second one was forged as close to final dimensions as I could on my
power hammer, but the end was trimmed and the spine had minimal cleanup
grinding. It isn't quite as wide, but is larger in all other ways at
just over 20" blade length, 5 1/2" wide, and 44" overall lenth, with a
weight just over 9 pounds.
It
picked up some extra texture from sitting a few days in a mixture of
vinegar that had more 30% acidity in it than I realized (most of the
mixture was 9% or 5%). Usually the vinegar eats the scale off without
affecting the steel; this time it definitely added texture.
More details, process video and pics, and general silliness in this video:
[MEDIA=youtube]SrEF1P5Qdh8[/MEDIA]
Howdy,
folks. Been a busy, productive year, and not as much time has been
spent on forums as I used to. But I have had a couple of interesting
projects I wanted to share. They are the two largest carcass splitters
I've made so far, one completed in February and one in August.
The
first was a commission from a chef who owns multiple restaurants who
wanted as large a carcass splitter as I could make as a gift for a
friend of his. The second was a commission from a fellow who butchers a
lot of hogs. Both started out as bars of 5/16" x 4" 80CrV2 steel, and
both ended up with hemp cord over neoprene handle wraps and Boltaron
sheaths. And both were hair-shaving sharp when shipped.
The
first one was forged as close to shape as possible with my power
hammer, with only minimal cleanup grinding along the edge profile before
grinding and filing the bevel to final dimensions. It ended up with a
blade just under 20" long, 5 3/4" wide at the widest, 41 1/4" overall
length, and a weight of 8.22 pounds, a good 3 pounds more than my
previous largest carcass splitter.
The
second one was forged as close to final dimensions as I could on my
power hammer, but the end was trimmed and the spine had minimal cleanup
grinding. It isn't quite as wide, but is larger in all other ways at
just over 20" blade length, 5 1/2" wide, and 44" overall lenth, with a
weight just over 9 pounds.
It
picked up some extra texture from sitting a few days in a mixture of
vinegar that had more 30% acidity in it than I realized (most of the
mixture was 9% or 5%). Usually the vinegar eats the scale off without
affecting the steel; this time it definitely added texture.
More details, process video and pics, and general silliness in this video:
[MEDIA=youtube]SrEF1P5Qdh8[/MEDIA]
Howdy,
folks. Been a busy, productive year, and not as much time has been
spent on forums as I used to. But I have had a couple of interesting
projects I wanted to share. They are the two largest carcass splitters
I've made so far, one completed in February and one in August.
The
first was a commission from a chef who owns multiple restaurants who
wanted as large a carcass splitter as I could make as a gift for a
friend of his. The second was a commission from a fellow who butchers a
lot of hogs. Both started out as bars of 5/16" x 4" 80CrV2 steel, and
both ended up with hemp cord over neoprene handle wraps and Boltaron
sheaths. And both were hair-shaving sharp when shipped.
The
first one was forged as close to shape as possible with my power
hammer, with only minimal cleanup grinding along the edge profile before
grinding and filing the bevel to final dimensions. It ended up with a
blade just under 20" long, 5 3/4" wide at the widest, 41 1/4" overall
length, and a weight of 8.22 pounds, a good 3 pounds more than my
previous largest carcass splitter.
The
second one was forged as close to final dimensions as I could on my
power hammer, but the end was trimmed and the spine had minimal cleanup
grinding. It isn't quite as wide, but is larger in all other ways at
just over 20" blade length, 5 1/2" wide, and 44" overall lenth, with a
weight just over 9 pounds.
It
picked up some extra texture from sitting a few days in a mixture of
vinegar that had more 30% acidity in it than I realized (most of the
mixture was 9% or 5%). Usually the vinegar eats the scale off without
affecting the steel; this time it definitely added texture.