Nicely done, Walter. I don’t have all your equipment, but I realize a lot of this can be done with only a hammer, tongs, and a barbecue drill- plus a lot of patience and skill.
well i use an electric chisel to make my groves in hidden tangs, however before or after I have grooved one half of the handle i clamp the piece of wood to the tang affix it with masking tape that has been tightly wrapped a few times around the tang to hold blad and tang together, remove the clamp locate my hole with a piece of steel to poke it out then drill my hole on one side go and make the second half then glue up. once its dry i simply pull the tang out and drill the hole. keep up the good work Mr. Sorrells (your one of my teachers and its only good manners to call you by your last name and MR.)... i just realized you can simply clamp it and then use a center punch to mark where the hole is and save your masking tape for grinding.
Cool freaking blade man! By the way, I just got a Grizzly sander grinder for both wood and metal work and I just love it! So far it's the best grinder I've ever had...for somebody with limited funds and a very small shop that is.
I was thinking the same thing ,but I've watched a lot of Japanese knife builders on you tube and you don't see them put a curve in the blade to compensate for quenching ? But it makes perfect sense to me . 🤔
When you were boring out the brass stock it looked as though that the Chuck was turning as well as the boring tool was cutting on the opposite side. If so I used to do this when I would get some chatter and cutting that way would take up some play in your Chuck and bearings.Thank You Jake Bissel.
Zip, zero, NATA. Looks quite similar to a bamboo splitting knife. Also, looks like a decent blade for battoning kindling for camp fires. Thanks for the share.
my hammer-head friend made a "sax' that looks like your nata, except the end slants backward. He made it out what he called the country blacksmith's favorite steel-OTS. OTS stands for Old Truck Spring.
The blade was pretty warped out of the quench but seemed to be straighter when assembling. Did it straighten during heat treat, was it ground flat or something else?
It was warped way before it went into the quinch.. you cant see it warped in a few places in the video.. it wasn't straight when it went in the quench.
It was “intentionally warped” in one direction, so that when it was quenched, it would pull back to close to straight, needing only slight correction which could be done while still hot. It’s a subtle science that takes time to learn. No, I can’t do it, but I understand the principle.
I made one of these a year ago but having a big problem with that one sided bevel. it bended due hardening rehardend it and freaked me out so i decided to make it western style with both sided bevel grind. But the cutting edge you may ask, no problem wih that its a 1000 layer damascus pretty sharp and still in use .
It was.. But the different Steels being side to side will warp in the opposite direction when quenched. Leave it bowed in the opposite direction and it'll straighten out
@@WildHuntKnives I was going to say that. Just like some guys when building drag cars, will “pre-twist” the frame in the opposite direction, so that under launch load, it tracks strait. It’s all about knowing your game.
I think it was intentional. Since the blade is composed of two different steels that react differently to quenching (deform at different rates) the blade would curb at quench time if forged straight. So to counterbalance for quench bending the blade had to be forged curved on the hard steel side in order to straighten at quenching. But that’s Japanese ni-mai for y’all... :)
I didn't catch it... Did he establish the bevel on the mild steel side or the carbon steel side. Can't seem to get it straight in my head. I'm guessing it only works on the mild steel side else you would be grinding away all the hard material but dun got myself confused!!
Nice project! I may have to do one but out of a leaf spring, because... I have plenty of leaf spring right now. Cocobolo, yeah I love the looks of it. But if I don't wear a respirator when working it, I have something akin to an allergy attack. Nasty sneezing, runny nose and watery eyes to the point that I have to stop.
1086m? Nice! Was it from some of Howard Clark's stash? 😉 Also, just wondering since I didn't notice it in the vid, but did you bother trying to take the warp out? I know that these ni-mai blades are notorious for warping since the high carbon expands when it forms martensite and the mild doesn't convert, but doesn't the mild steel also lend it for being "easier" to straighten (as opposed to mono-steel blades) after heat treating? Great vid, thanks for sharing!
Question: Would large old file be a suitable starting point for a chopping tool like this? Material-wise it should be a 1086ish steel, but would the material cause problems due to its hardness? How would I have to alter the tempering times/temperatures to make a solid piece of high-carbon steel usable for chopping tools?
I'll have to make one of these! Would leaf spring be a good metal to make one out of? Thanks for the video! I enjoy watching your videos! They make me want to go out and MAKE SOMETHING!!
I don't sand rosewood anymore. Did it once and it gave me a rash for a day or two and a bit of laboured breathing for the better part of a fortnight. P.S.: Good call on the gloves for doing the epoxy.
When you drilled for your pins did you drill the tang and the handles together? I’ve noticed that the steel sometimes makes the drill bit walk in the handle. I end up drilling them all separate, but it makes them hard to line up.
I"m afraid that its handle is not strong enough. Tang length is not too short but blass pin is not thick enough, two-pieces wooden handle is too thin at upper(Mine) side, so I think these points will cause handle cracking with hard chopping. Traditional handle of Nata is made by one-piece wood that is grooved to tighten a tang from both sides, and fullule(口金) is fit to tighten a tang more solidly, and burnt nail is used to fix tang and handle and its penetrated point is bent to prevent loosening.
I was questioning that too. I don't think Walt mentioned that warp in his plan. Unless that is used like a draw knife, that was not planned and it is just a warp that was not corrected.
Wait.... is there a glitch in the matrix? Walter is not wearing his patented light colored shirt.... This may not be the real Walter Sorrells???? Hmmmm, very suspicious...
Not sure where you are located, but i hear the New Jersey Steel Barren is good american owned steel dealer. They also provide heat treat specs. And have a knife maker in house.
In a lot of your videos, you're hammering out the bevel. In this one, you said you could grind it out? Is it true, could you potentially just use a belt sander to grind out the bevel everyone with every blade, and not have to hammer it out?
i can understand why you used epoxy. but epoxy is only good to glue the metal to the wood. to glue wood to wood, wood glue is pretty good. there are enough articles about that available.
That Nata looked sick! Seriously, epic work, Walter. And with good life advice too. Nice one!
Nicely done, Walter. I don’t have all your equipment, but I realize a lot of this can be done with only a hammer, tongs, and a barbecue drill- plus a lot of patience and skill.
Your still the best teacher around Sir !!!
I love it! ... hatchet - ish, sort of thing...
I'm going to try my hand at one of these today! Haven't forged anything in so long, hopefully I can complete it within the week.
well i use an electric chisel to make my groves in hidden tangs, however before or after I have grooved one half of the handle i clamp the piece of wood to the tang affix it with masking tape that has been tightly wrapped a few times around the tang to hold blad and tang together, remove the clamp locate my hole with a piece of steel to poke it out then drill my hole on one side go and make the second half then glue up. once its dry i simply pull the tang out and drill the hole. keep up the good work Mr. Sorrells (your one of my teachers and its only good manners to call you by your last name and MR.)... i just realized you can simply clamp it and then use a center punch to mark where the hole is and save your masking tape for grinding.
Hey, I'm a Grizzly guy also! My first Grizzly tool was my 12X36 metal lathe... 30 years ago. Still using it and it's still going strong.
Cool freaking blade man! By the way, I just got a Grizzly sander grinder for both wood and metal work and I just love it! So far it's the best grinder I've ever had...for somebody with limited funds and a very small shop that is.
I am impressed by your ability to intuit the bend ratio between the two steels at quench time!
I was thinking the same thing ,but I've watched a lot of Japanese knife builders on you tube and you don't see them put a curve in the blade to compensate for quenching ? But it makes perfect sense to me . 🤔
Looks like a lawnmower blade with a handle. I like it!
They call it a sling bland mmHHHHmm
Is it weird that I want to buy that? It looks like a beautiful functional camping tool. Also a cool campfire conversation piece.
I'll make you one, after I make mine first :)
Thank you for teaching me something knew.
Never going to make a blade but I'm keeping it sharp.
✌️🦁
This is a great example of how local conditions influence tool design.
I read the title machete multiple times and never noticed it was hatchet until you said.... I think i will one of these i really like it👍👍
When you were boring out the brass stock it looked as though that the Chuck was turning as well as the boring tool was cutting on the opposite side. If so I used to do this when I would get some chatter and cutting that way would take up some play in your Chuck and bearings.Thank You Jake Bissel.
I love Japanese woodworking tools. I'm glad to see more of us westerners using them. I think "work smarter not harder" when I seen them.
After you did the quench it looked like the blank had a bit of a warp to it.
Good job. Enjoyed the class. Take care and God bless.
Looks like a froe .
Nicely done .
Why do we see such a huge curve in the blade when quenching? Did you correct it off camera?
Zip, zero, NATA. Looks quite similar to a bamboo splitting knife. Also, looks like a decent blade for battoning kindling for camp fires. Thanks for the share.
Would love to see you make some Japanese scissors.
What a sweet piece! Nicely executed
my hammer-head friend made a "sax' that looks like your nata, except the end slants backward. He made it out what he called the country blacksmith's favorite steel-OTS. OTS stands for Old Truck Spring.
Beautiful work sir! I want one...
Neat idea I am goin to give it a try
Would it have been practical to make the ferrule first, then when the handle was still square chuck it into a wood lathe and turn the ferrule seat?
The blade was pretty warped out of the quench but seemed to be straighter when assembling. Did it straighten during heat treat, was it ground flat or something else?
Belt?
It was warped way before it went into the quinch.. you cant see it warped in a few places in the video.. it wasn't straight when it went in the quench.
It was “intentionally warped” in one direction, so that when it was quenched, it would pull back to close to straight, needing only slight correction which could be done while still hot. It’s a subtle science that takes time to learn.
No, I can’t do it, but I understand the principle.
Can you do a video on how to straighten a slight radial twist? I try not to grind my blank flat after forging. Looking to maintain a forged look.
Always look forward to your videos... always learn a lot.
Beautiful work.
Looks like that press could use some stability lol Great looking blade I love how the Japanese conserve materials
would you make another one for a custom order?
I made one of these a year ago but having a big problem with that one sided bevel. it bended due hardening rehardend it and freaked me out so i decided to make it western style with both sided bevel grind. But the cutting edge you may ask, no problem wih that its a 1000 layer damascus pretty sharp and still in use .
Nice one Walter, you inspired me to make one already.
Itd be cool to see you chop stuff with the things you make
I really love the way you do to the blade 5:25
too awesome... 😍😍😍
wanna have one like those..
try using "sonokeling" wood for the handle..
Very nice...great video
am i the only one who noticed that the blade was banana-ed pre quench and it was all dandy once it was tempered
I just thought it was the lense used to film? I dunno...
It was.. But the different Steels being side to side will warp in the opposite direction when quenched. Leave it bowed in the opposite direction and it'll straighten out
Yep.
@@WildHuntKnives I was going to say that. Just like some guys when building drag cars, will “pre-twist” the frame in the opposite direction, so that under launch load, it tracks strait. It’s all about knowing your game.
I noticed the blade itself had a bit of a sideways curve. Is this meant to help it chop better?
I've been wondering about that. I'd love to know the reason for it.
I think it was intentional. Since the blade is composed of two different steels that react differently to quenching (deform at different rates) the blade would curb at quench time if forged straight. So to counterbalance for quench bending the blade had to be forged curved on the hard steel side in order to straighten at quenching. But that’s Japanese ni-mai for y’all... :)
I didn't catch it... Did he establish the bevel on the mild steel side or the carbon steel side. Can't seem to get it straight in my head. I'm guessing it only works on the mild steel side else you would be grinding away all the hard material but dun got myself confused!!
Mild. Hardened side is the flat side
Kinda wondered that myself.
I would like to see Walter's take on a splitting froe with a straight handle.
Isn't that what he just made..... what is the difference?
Beautiful work as always!
Quick question: does it matter which side the bevel is on? Thinking left handed or right handed use.
Nice work!
fresh is good, that is why I watch you.
Ryuugu Rena approves of this!
'Haaauuuuuu! Omochikaeri!' - Ryuugu Rena
Very nice! Also, the Grizzly sponsorship sounds like a great move :)
Way to go Walter. I’d like one.
Nice project! I may have to do one but out of a leaf spring, because... I have plenty of leaf spring right now. Cocobolo, yeah I love the looks of it. But if I don't wear a respirator when working it, I have something akin to an allergy attack. Nasty sneezing, runny nose and watery eyes to the point that I have to stop.
1086m? Nice! Was it from some of Howard Clark's stash? 😉 Also, just wondering since I didn't notice it in the vid, but did you bother trying to take the warp out? I know that these ni-mai blades are notorious for warping since the high carbon expands when it forms martensite and the mild doesn't convert, but doesn't the mild steel also lend it for being "easier" to straighten (as opposed to mono-steel blades) after heat treating? Great vid, thanks for sharing!
Why not use wood glue when initially joining the handle?
I've had good luck with liquid nails construction adhesive
Question:
Would large old file be a suitable starting point for a chopping tool like this? Material-wise it should be a 1086ish steel, but would the material cause problems due to its hardness? How would I have to alter the tempering times/temperatures to make a solid piece of high-carbon steel usable for chopping tools?
Files are typically 1095 or similar
Youre awesone Walter!!
I'll have to make one of these! Would leaf spring be a good metal to make one out of?
Thanks for the video! I enjoy watching your videos! They make me want to go out and MAKE SOMETHING!!
I don't sand rosewood anymore. Did it once and it gave me a rash for a day or two and a bit of laboured breathing for the better part of a fortnight.
P.S.: Good call on the gloves for doing the epoxy.
Thanks Walter. I always enjoy your inspiring videos.
Hey Walter, what would you think about doing test videos of your knives after you make them?
When you drilled for your pins did you drill the tang and the handles together? I’ve noticed that the steel sometimes makes the drill bit walk in the handle. I end up drilling them all separate, but it makes them hard to line up.
What press is that sir?
I"m afraid that its handle is not strong enough. Tang length is not too short but blass pin is not thick enough, two-pieces wooden handle is too thin at upper(Mine) side, so I think these points will cause handle cracking with hard chopping.
Traditional handle of Nata is made by one-piece wood that is grooved to tighten a tang from both sides, and fullule(口金) is fit to tighten a tang more solidly, and burnt nail is used to fix tang and handle and its penetrated point is bent to prevent loosening.
Aaaaah we gotta see a couple swings from this thing man! Pictures are not enough 😅
looks really similar to the Hukari, guess people with similar problems come up with similar solutions
How about a Nata chopping demo.. great video as always.
Such a great looking piece! I appreciate your videos keep up the great work.
awesome hatchet
Is the blade curved?
I was questioning that too. I don't think Walt mentioned that warp in his plan. Unless that is used like a draw knife, that was not planned and it is just a warp that was not corrected.
I have a chunk of wood so hard and oily/waxy that it will barely cut on a band saw it makes an incredible amount of smoke. Smells nice though.
mesquite?
@@johndowe7003 lignum vita/vera wood
@@Bshwag never heard of it until now
@@johndowe7003 check it out great for small parts its in the top ten hardest in the world. tropical hard wood.
now that you got that grizzly lathe, maybe you can start chambering your own barrels for long guns and ARs
Wait.... is there a glitch in the matrix? Walter is not wearing his patented light colored shirt.... This may not be the real Walter Sorrells???? Hmmmm, very suspicious...
Awesome, where I can buy one 😀
Is there a right handed and left handed style Nata... or have I been fibbed to by a know it all
So it’s a axehete?
Where do you buy your steel?
What's a recomend US dealer?
Not sure where you are located, but i hear the New Jersey Steel Barren is good american owned steel dealer. They also provide heat treat specs. And have a knife maker in house.
New jersey steel baron or admiral or texas knife supply or alpha knife supply if your in the u.s. i have no idea about over seas ...
@@FiredUpKnifeandTool i think walter hasmentioed pop's knife supply before
Ah! Favorite street fighting tool of Taiwanese gangster from older generations!
Love the "Glock Store" tee shirt!!
LOVELY!
So Lemme get this straight. Its Nata hatchet?
ROTFLMAO!!
GTFO 👉👉
dead
af
As a father I appreciate this comment on a deep level.
Shows Messer; This is a knife.
Shows Machete; This is both a knife and a sword.
Shows this video; This is a Hatchet.
Mr.Sorrells,I am willing to bet that You would forge an incredible Omi No Yari or Yari Sword.
Nice job man, I kinda want to buy it off you
Love it!
Love that dime joke.
Very nice! My compliments!!!
Only a slight minus: it's called naTa, as you wrote it correctly, not naDa, as you pronounce it. A T is a T and not a D.
In a lot of your videos, you're hammering out the bevel. In this one, you said you could grind it out? Is it true, could you potentially just use a belt sander to grind out the bevel everyone with every blade, and not have to hammer it out?
I love it
it is thicker than i thought it was
Is it a mahachet, or a hachete? No matter, it’s awesome.
Hachete has a nice ring to it. Rolls off the tongue
I love the glock store t shirt
Make a naginata next
17:09 - STORY OF MY LIFE!!!
Pretty sure I just convinced my ole lady to name the next baby walter
I Want A FULLTANG JAPANESE HATCHET
Full tang woulda doubled the price of that Nata.
A hatchete, as it were.
Walter: Uses appendix level 2 wood in handle construction.
Me: really bro. You gonna do that shit?
He never fixed the warp in the blade
i can understand why you used epoxy. but epoxy is only good to glue the metal to the wood. to glue wood to wood, wood glue is pretty good. there are enough articles about that available.
Says every keyboard warrior that doesn't make knives
Clearly machete is the more likely term
Come on man you couldn’t chop some stuff for us?