My first Wharncliffe

Lerch

Well-Known Member
Just finished these two up today, the bottom one is a modification of a EDC knife i make all the time and the top one is my first Wharncliffe blade. I havent made a knife for myself in a long while and i needed one that was good for opening ammo boxes and stuff all day long at my job and i figured a Wharncliffe blade design would work well for that.

Both are 440C stainless, cryo treated and double tempered, G10 handles and acid etched and stonewashed blade finish

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Let me know what ya think and thanks for looking

steve
 
Glad ya like them,

OSU orange is pretty big around here so it goes over pretty well :) , that and when ya drop the knife its a little easier to find. But i know what your saying, i have had a few people want me to make them yellow handles and the color always seems to give me a headache

thanks
steve
 
A forum member asked me a question and i decided to post it on here instead of straight to him for 2 reasons. First reason being that from what i understand now i the wharncliffe blade is actually more than likely a Sheeps Foot design. I had always heard the name "wharncliffe" but until the difference between that and a sheeps foot was asked of me i had never really researched it. From what i gather the wharncliffe has more of a sharpened point and the sheeps foot has the sharp curve of the spin down toward the cutting edge and very little if any point.

The second question that was asked of me was about the acid etching on the blades. I am using Ferric Chloride (Archers Etchant) diluted in water (1 container of etchant to one Gal of water) . I keep my fluid in a large tuperware container but i would be much better off to make a PVC tube to suspend the blades in the fluid . I rest my blades in the fluid standing up so that there is even fluid on all sides, if i just lay them in the fluid you end up with light spots where the blade rest on the container walls. Carbon steel blades blades etch very quickly (i do 30 sec intervals) 440C etches fairly quickly, these blades were etched for 20min because i wanted them very dark. A 5-10 min etch on 440C gives a nice stone grey look. CPM154 takes a while to etch, i have done 20-30 min to get a medium dark etch. After i etch the blades i rinse them with dish soap and warm water and then place them in a industrial vibratory bowl with triangular ceramic media and water with a little dish soap and let it run for about 30 min. Thats the way i have done it so far.

thanks
steve
 
thanks for the input LERCH ill give that etch a try on my sheepfoot im make for a friend , ore maybe ill change up to a wharncliffe point its a skinner blafe
 
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