Guindesigns
Well-Known Member
What is the set up for a cryo cycle? With liquid nitrogen? Do I just put my blades on a wire and put them in my Dewar to soak? And what about bigger blades that won't fit in the Dewar?
How wide is the chef knives at the widest point? I used to make my full size chef knives a full 2" wide at heel, but now I knock off about .060" to a widest width of 1.94" so they will slide into my dewar with a 50mm opening. Never know the difference in that .060" width loss.Ok I have been giving a Dewar that does not have a bigger mouth and can NOT afford a new one right now. But I have some nitro v chef knives I need to do. How can I do those??
Hi Jess....why would that matter?When putting blades in your Dewar try to keep them above the liquid. The liquid will gas off much quicker if the blades are actually submerged.
When putting blades in your Dewar try to keep them above the liquid. The liquid will gas off much quicker if the blades are actually submerged.
Putting a warm (relatively speaking) blade into the liquid nitrogen will cause more to boil off, while suspending in the vapors doesn't cause as much boiling off. The vapor area above the liquid is still really cold, in the -300F range. Problem is in a normal size dewar there isn't much vapor space above the liquid until dewar gets low.Hi Jess....why would that matter?
so it's an economy thing not a quality of blade thing...as in a shock advantage?Putting a warm (relatively speaking) blade into the liquid nitrogen will cause more to boil off, while suspending in the vapors doesn't cause as much boiling off. The vapor area above the liquid is still really cold, in the -300F range. Problem is in a normal size dewar there isn't much vapor space above the liquid until dewar gets low.
Mike, I'm not sure how you're planning to work that headspace in a 10 liter dewar. Do you plan to transfer a couple liters from 30 liter dewar to the 10 liter dewar so will have a good bit of headspace above liquid? If so, should work just fine - not sure how to transfer LN from the big dewar to small dewar. If you plan to get a 10 liter dewar and have it filled, then when full you wouldn't have any headspace.
By "hot blade" I'm assuming you are talking "relative" to the LN temp <-300F? I tend to move a blade from quench to a freezer to cool blade before putting in dewar. A freezer temp of -5F is still a "hot blade" relative to LN, but it seems to boil the LN less than a room temperature blade. How long before steady state is achieved in a LN vapor space? Not sure but I suspect about same time as with liquid LN. I tend to leave in a hour and up to few hours. There has been talk about 24 hrs in LN to create ETA carbides, but I've also read that is not a proven thing. Doesn't hurt, but not sure it really does much good.
My understanding is cryo treatment is a continuing part of the quench, so the blade shouldn't sit as room temp long at all. The blade should see a continual cooling from austenitizing temp to LN temps. The austenite conversion to martensite happens during quench and continues thru the cooling. If the cooling stops for any length of time it's possible for the RA (Retained Austenite) to get locked in place, hence the desire for a continual cooling.
The above is my understanding and is ALWAYS open for correction.
Ken H>