SWAG , huh?Yep, I look at the steel I am forging, and sort of imagine it all squished into the shape of whatever I’m making, and use that much of it. Very scientific.
What’s “SWAG”?SWAG , huh?
Ah, I get it! Yep, that’s my methodI believe he's referring to the scientific wild ass guess...
yeppers, yall unnerstan hillbillyAh, I get it! Yep, that’s my method
Every knife I've forged, I didn't measure anything. I figure out the lengths I need to forge and write down the rough numbers. As I forge, I'll mark distances on my anvil face with soapstone.One of the first knifemaking DVD's that I bought was the Charles Ochs basic forging video where he made a 7 inch fighter from 52100. He took a 7 inch piece of 1/4 thick bar stock and forged the though tang knife from it. Combination fo thinning a little bit and distal taper made it work.
Now that’s what I’m talkin about! I knew all that math I took would come in handy. I’ll have to go back and read up because I don’t remember studying the swish factor, must of missed that day. Thank you, sir. Heading to the forge to squish some shit out!! LolYep, I look at the steel I am forging, and sort of imagine it all squished into the shape of whatever I’m making, and use that much of it. Very scientific.
ThanksI don't forge a whole lot, but enough to have a plan when I do. I forge 1/4" stock mostly. I figure it it terms of finished dimensions, plus material loss. So if I want an 1/8" thick knife, 1" wide and 10" long,
I'd start with 1/4" thick, 3/4" wide, 6" long, and grind off extra thickness or cut off excess length as needed.
ThanksEvery knife I've forged, I didn't measure anything. I figure out the lengths I need to forge and write down the rough numbers. As I forge, I'll mark distances on my anvil face with soapstone.
I forge the blade first on the end of the stock, then start to draw out the tang a little, estimate how much metal I need for the tang, and hot cut my stock off there. Then I forge the tang.
I work almost exclusively from round bar stock. 1/2" being the smallest I think I've made a knife from. Usually 3/4" to 1" bar. Just cause it's what I have on hand. I got a bunch of it a while back (and might be getting more, soon).
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ThanksI'd you're copying a knife...
If you want to get fancy, you can drop the knife in a graduated cylinder, fill it up with water, pull the knife out and measure the change.
Or put the knife on a scale and do the math. Mass to volume.
OR draw it in CAD and extrude it to thickness and look at the material properties - namely volume.
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Does anyone know where I can get an Excel based metals weight calculator. We are creating a shop quoting package and would like to integrate the stock weight calculation within our spreadsheet. Currently we open MSO metals weight calculator in a separate window, enter the pertinent information and then copy the resulting weight calculation into the appropriate cell. I'd like to avoid having to make the calculator from scratch, writing all the formulas myself although I can if need be.I'd you're copying a knife...
If you want to get fancy, you can drop the knife in a graduated cylinder, fill it up with water, pull the knife out and measure the change.
Or put the knife on a scale and do the math. Mass to volume.
OR draw it in CAD and extrude it to thickness and look at the Metal calculator online - namely volume.
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