How To Heat Treat A Knife | The 4 Steps You NEED To Know
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- Опубліковано 22 тра 2024
- Knife Making - How To Heat Treat A Knife | Super Simple DIY heat treating. The 4 steps you NEED to know. More info below⬇️
Beginner knife making steel video. What steel I recommend⬇️
• Beginner Knife Making ...
Heat treating simplified! In this video I show you how to heat treat a knife the easy way. I give you 4 steps to heat treating, which include : Normalizing, heating, quenching and tempering your diy knife.
Heat treating is an exact science. However you can heat treat simple carbon steels using relatively crude methods. Simple carbon for knife making can include 1050,1060,1075,1080,1084,1095,5160 and others. However each of these particular steels have their own variations in both normalizing,quencing, and tempering temperatures.
Some of these steels require soaking time at the austenitize temperature in order for the carbon to "diffuse" through the iron.
This is why I wouldn't recommend 1095 or o1 as a beginner knife making steel. As soaking time at temperature is required in order for the carbon to get fully into solution before quenching.
Yes, you can use these steels (1095, O1 ect.) and get a hardened blade using a forge, if you know what your doing, or get lucky. But, realize that you will most likely will get better results using a simpler steel like 1080 or 1084 that doesn't require a soaking at temperature.
A 1080 steel blade will most likely Harden all the way through using crude methods where 1095 or O1 may not.
Remember this is an exact science. If you have any more questions about temperatures for a particular steel please google "Time temperature transformation graph" for the particular steel you plan on using.
Stay away from forums for info on heat treating. There is helpful info on forums if you already know how to sift through the mess of bad info. Quenching in motor oil, mixed with ice, heated to 180F, under a pale moon light, or any other home recipe, is generally a bad idea, and wont give you the full benefits of your particular steel.
Steel manufactures spend literally hundreds of millions of dollars finding out EXACTLY what works on their particular steel, with their particular ingredients. Always refer to their info for questions regarding temperature and quench.
This video is for the back yard knife maker looking to simply heat treat their knife using crude methods. Realize I can't go into every aspect of every steel in a single youtube video. AGAIN😉, this is a simple video explaining how to Harden/ heat treat a simple knife.
If you have any questions please ask! However, If you have different
"opinions" thats fine too, but I will most likely refer you to Time temperature graphs from the a steel manufactures website. And their recommendations for their steel.
Hopefully this helps! Thank you for watching and hope you have a great day!
About⬇️
Hi, Im Alex, im a knife maker and UA-camr, based out of southern Pennsylvania and my youtube channel is Outdoors55. This channel started as an outdoor backpacking channel, but quickly grew into a knife/ knife making channel. Everything I do on my channel is family friendly. I primarily focus on knife / knife making videos but occasionally throw in something different. Thank you for watching!😀 - Навчання та стиль
Important 🛑 MUST READ below ⬇️
In light of new information provided by Dr. Larrin Thomas after this video was published, canola oil is NOT a suitable quench oil. In most cases you will NOT achieve full hardness, or even close to it , using canola. Parks 50 quench oil is recommended and can be found here amzn.to/3F1unye
I would also recommend his book amzn.to/3IVs6ac
If you can not buy the proper quench oil id would recommend sending your blades out for heat treatment as its relatively cheap and you will get perfect results 🙂
Best beginner sharpening stone as of 2020⬇️
amzn.to/2usHlq3
Leather strops and compound at www.knifepointgear.com
All strops made by me🙂
These are affiliated links i may earn from qualifying purchases.
Hi I need your help
Is used motor oil good? Got lotsa of it.
Why not use an infrared heat gun to get the temp?
@@haldyordan2316 I've used it before. But he'll, I've used it chain oil in my saw too.
Are you heat treating rebar?
From a professional heat treater, lots of good content in this video. A couple of tips for quenching - use brine water for plain carbon steels as it reduces vapour quench phase (note the nose of the curve in the temp phase transition diagram and this should be avoided with rapid cooling at the higher temperatures). Also vapour phase can cause uneven cooling and thermal stresses when entering the hard martensite phase which leads to cracking). Second agitation is important as you mention for same reasons above. Rapid cooling down to low temperatures is good for inducing compressive stresses on surfaces - which helps to strengthen and toughen a blade. Sure, sometimes you get a crack and it usually due to material defects. Throw it out and start again! (We cant do that in our game as it might be a $100k part!)
Little did you know this simple comment you made was very very informative to one coming into it
Always great to hear from a specialist who knows metallurgy.
a tip for high carbon or tool steel like M series (molybdenum) heat treats, using peanut oil set at 140 Fahrenheit is great for beginners because it helps with the rapid cooling and escape of oxygen, which will prevent cracks.
@Robert McConville I never understood the file checking when it comes to the hardness of your blade. A bastard file has a specific hardness so why doesn't it bite into hardened steel? That tells me that the hardened steel has reached at or above the hardness of the file. But that's where my question comes in; I have used a file to score and break glass before when I couldn't find my glass cutter and I'm pretty sure that glass is much harder than steel. I'm not doubting the method. I've used it before; but it just blows my mind how I can get a file to skate across a piece of Steel that's been hardened and yet I can still scratch glass with that same file that would not bite into the steel🤔🤔 it's weird. As a specialist; could you explain this? Genuine question. Not being a smart-ass at all.
@@jerichojoe307 depending on what kind of glass it is, a file is can be harder than the glass. A file is made of hardened steel.
This is hands down the best heat treat video I’ve come across. So easy to follow and informative without being overwhelming. Kudos man
I DIY everything, and would add this is one of the best vids - regardless of subject.
I agree with this guy
@@vidarsigrun and I agree with this guy.
Could not agree more. Love it!
One of the best I've found/seen in many years as a knife maker
Most underrated and undersubbed account on UA-cam. High quality videos
Thanks!
Very good thanks 👌
True
agreed
That's because they want people to pay to put their vids in everyone's suggestions...
I'm just starting with forging, so I've spent a few hours learning about heat treating. This is by far the most actionable explanation of heat treating I've found. You have given us just enough metallurgical detail to explain why every step is so important without getting lost in the chemistry, and good benchmarks for beginners to look for. Bravo!
Excellent straight up information for heat treating.
Well spoken and demo'd... TFS!
Thank you for the clear explanation Alex. This video is exactly what i was looking for to get more familiar with heat treatimg knives. Great video, thnx!
I love your channel. This is a great video on heat treating! Thank you so much for making it. Your insight is much appreciated.
Great video! Really well done and well presented. Thoroughly explained with visual details, thanks for sharing!
Great explanation on the whole process my good sir! This is very tricky to wrap the mind around, I appreciate you explaining it simply.
Best video on the heat treating i've found on UA-cam till now
Been making blades for alot of yrs an heard alot of tutorials. You did good youngster top shelf. Keep helping these folks out. Just an old grunt.
Thanks for stopping by!
No worries ill check in from time to time. Merry Christmas enjoy the forge an all it can tach you in the yrs to come.
I've watched this video several times. One of the best out there!! Clear & concise! Thank you - David
Honestly, this is one of the best videos on heat treating I've seen so far. Not too much information, but enough that I feel confident to give it a try. Thank you!
This was the most informative and helpful video I have seen on heat treating so far. Great help.
Your videos are perfect easy to understand straight forward. Thank you sir I keep finding myself looking up new stuff and your videos are number one. Keep posting!
I love your rudimentary brick forge. Not a complex build, but simple enough that a backyard hack can assemble one and not cost them a lot of money. Kudos to you for all this helpful information. Cheers!
Yes it's easy to be intimidated by all of the mystique about the superior heat treat of Paul Bos, Rowan and some of the differential heat treat methods from Tops knives. Good upload!
Incredibly helpful. Thank you so much!
precise & straight up information ! thanks!
Thinking about making a couple custom wood carving (little) knives at home, and am so glad to know we can harden them at home without anything fancy. Thank you!
Excelent video for beginners with simples terms about scientificts subjets.
love you videos....excellent straightforward info,this is one of the better videos that explain some of the details that others leave out.love it
Thank you - a simple guide that actually works. Achieved a perfect hardness on a rasp file, which I've had problems doing in the past. Excellent guide for the novice knife maker. Paul - London UK.
I know this video is 3 years old. But I’ve learned so much not only from this video but all your other videos. The information is so easy to understand and your examples are clear and easy to see. Your videos have turned a passing as best interest into a full blown hobby of buying old knives and trying to bring them back to shape. I’ve recently started looking into making my fist knife. I truly hope you keep making these awesome videos!!!
This is the simplest heat treating tutorial i’ve watched. Great content! Please make more!
Good video, I'm a amateur file knife maker and heat treating is a bit hit n miss but this vid gives me good pointers, thanks bud and atb to you, Paul 👍🏻🇬🇧
Extremely Helpful, and Informative. Easy too follow and Understand. Thanks for the Insights.
Great info Alex. Thank you!
i agree, just stumbled upon your videos as i am new to the knife making scene. several weeks of searcing for helpful info and usually end up get frustrated with the guys stammering on and on about stuff totally not on the topic of what they are supposed to be showing that i click off. YOUR videos however are truly helpful, without any wasted time or effort explaining. excellent job in teaching the basics. thank you
This isc100% golden - exactly what I needed to know before diving in. Great job, many thanks!!
As a metallurgy engineer, I approve the video with a like :D Nice clearly explained issues, and most importantly correctly. Best regards for the channel :)
Very excellent video
Great audio ( thanks for being able to hear instructions and LOUD ROCK AND DRILLING OR WE DO HAVE GARAGE TOOLING THAT IS NOISY.
BUT you treated me and others within ear shot nice and I adding a special thanks for your audio Sir.
I've done a few with a fine and season of 40 plus years BlackSmith and he teaching me enough to get me Great results and much as shown by you
"Sir Thanks "
Thank you for this information l can see you are a professional, and know what you are talking about.
Wow dude I love how simple and effective your forge set up is. And the way you heat the oil as well.. nice and simple
This video is perfect for understanding the steps involved in heat txt. The first video I have come across that included ALL steps from normalization to tempering. You have a gift for explaining things in a clear, easy to understand way. Thank you for posting!
Amazing video. Simple, concise, exactly what a dummy like me needs to know. Thank you. So many forging channels don't ever really explain anything because they come from "watch me and learn" backgrounds.
Thanks man. This video is what I needed for creating a cheap and practical forge
Definitely be trying this out with my next blade. Great and informative video!
Ive been watching your videos for years now. I live watching how you've evolved in this craft. Awesome.
A Natural Teacher. Thank You for Patiently Sharing Your Experience Brother.
The best heat treating video I've ever run across; video takes heat treating from normalizing to the tempering......well done!
Thank you Alex!!
This is a great video with a ton of information!
Your amazing.
Thank you I'm not as intimidated as I was.
Yes I'm going to try this.
Thank you
I actually teach metallurgical science and this guy is exactly right! Education through experience....the best. Great job! Also a knife maker.
Thanks for the comment! 👊
That is an interesting video. I like your explanations and your obvious subject knowledge. Thank-you for sharing.
Great job. Conveyed in a way that I’m sure most people would understand. Really helpful and useful. Thanks a lot.
Best common beginner version of this process I have found yet. Thank you for the info and video
Thanks for the kind words! I really appreciate it!
Dude.. this is one of the most informative vids on this topic ive seen yet. Granted it was dumbed down to its most basic points, but thats exactly what a noob like me needs. Thank you so much for the excellent work.
Very informative. Thanks.
Great share, thank you for helping us beginners✌🏻✌🏻
Pretty good explanation of the processes, without being confusing.
Incredibly helpful. THANK YOU
This was great for my school project 😁 thanks a ton, this video led to my first knife ever actually being effective
Great tips, Thanks for sharing!
Excellent ! Thanks !
You are the man! Thank you my friend
very helpful, thank you.
Thanks a lot for this share!
Looks like I’m not the only one saying thanks for the best heat treat video.
Thank you
You really covered it all and got right to the point you actually take the beginner to a level that we actually know something
While doing this knife I ran into a guy that works for the same co I do but he is in the heat treat depart and was the manager
He was impressed that I knew about all the steps and how to temper it as well
No job offers yet but I’m not going there that place is hot as hell year round lol lol
Thanks for this, big help
just getting ready to heat treat my first blade.... it got too hot during the shaping and stock removal processes... so its required this time... thank you so much
very well presented, I know a lot more than before!
Very good explanations. Easy learning - is what it's all about. Thank you.
GREAT video! Thank you!
Great video! Easy to understand!
Outstanding video. Quick. Informative and to the point.
This is a great video on heat treating. If you are interested in knife making watch this video. Thank you for the great info.
Thank you I am a beginner UA-cam Smith and this video has helped me a lot.
Excellent job buddy! I really enjoyed the humor, like the phone call segment. Good job TH X
AWESOME AWESOME VIDEO, I LOVED IT, THANK YOU!
very well explained !
Just heat treated my first knife following your guide. I used a MSR Whisperlite international plus a propane torch to get it up to non magnetic, got it a shade lighter then right into the oil. Hardened just like it was supposed to! Is in the oven now! Thank you for this video and you are right, it is sounds much more scary than it really is!
Very informative video, well made!
Very informative and helpful. Thank you.
Thanks dude i've always wantd to make a knife no matter what but i didnt know anything about heat treating, now it seems really easy
Thanks for the information
Thanks for sharing this with us
Extremely well put together and informative video. Well done 👍🏻
I am not a knife maker and really don't have any aspirations to really get into it but I do have several tools (I am a woodturner) that have been overheated while sharpening, that I will attempt to heat treat rather than just throw them away. This is a very helpful instructional. Thanks!
thanks dude.. the best explanation..
thank you OD55 very helpful
Great job !
Beautiful. Well explained. Thanks.
Thanks Brother!
Thank you for answering a lot of questions I had
Great information! Thanks.
Best video on this subject anywhere!
You're dead right about the process seeming quote intimidating. I am not a knife maker but, I love the idea and I am looking into the needed tools etc to get started.
Your video helped me understand the basics a lot more.
Cheers millions!!
Random supportive comment time, any progress Pal?
@@OldNavajoTricks - hey. Random support made my night, cheers!
My life has changed considerably within the last year - year and a half. The idea of making the knives is still certainly something I am interested in but, it's on the backburner right now.
Cheers for the message.
@@canned__meat No worries man, I wish you well in all aspects of life, priorities though am I right?
Life can change in seconds I know so hopefully you'll achieve your goals at the right time for you 👍
Great video. Definitely bookmark this to refer back to.
Thanks for the video!!! You answered several questions that I have. I also picked up a few things just watching you shop setup… I do have a question about hardening and tempering stainless steel. I know it not the same animal and I have wondered if it possible to do at “home” and how would you do it??? No one ever talks about stainless…. Thanks again for the video!!! I was able to understand the process in the way you talked about it!!!
Great information you've given me here thanks
Very well explained all the steps
Excellent information ! New subscriber here. I'll be using the knowledge presented for sure!
Thanks for this video man
Great video great information .Thank you
Awesome Video! Great Instructional!
This is great for what I'm working with, as a beginner, I have the privilege of working with Steel in the "I have no freaking clue" carbon content range, which starts with supposedly mild steel and is increased in carbon content via carburizing flame with a blowtorch, a process that I can only hope is effective at making something useful with what is available...
Cheers for the info mate, it is a great help and greatly appreciated. Liked and subbed
Thanks! Very helpful!!