OK for an update on this thread. As mentioned before I ordered 2 lb of anhydrous borax and got it in other day. Today I got the forge out and tried it. I used 7 layers of 15N20 (.074") and 1095 (.-94") with a thin layer (.003") of pure nickel between layers so it would match the first little billet I forged. Once cleaned this are about 1" wide X 3" long. I ground clean both sides of steel, clamped tight in vise and welded the end corners with a rod welded to one end. Soaked stack edge with WD40 (just sounded good), put in forge and heated to a dull red, put small amount of borax on edges to cover good, put back in forge and let soak for a few minutes until it looked really hot (about 2100F per indicator), pulled out and used my "Baking Soda" power to forge. Repeated a couple of times and it's looking pretty good. Just to check I allowed billet to cool some and ground sides smooth. Looking good, no visible delaminations.
Ground one side clean, took previous billet & cleaned one side good. Clamped in vise and welded ends, turned over to spot a weld in center - wound up welding full length so this turned out to be a dry weld. This 2 layer stack is about 1"X1"X3". Put in forge, got hot (around 2100F) with good soak. Set weld, then started drawing billet out. After drawing out some I've got a nice billet about 0.4"X1-1/8"X5". I ground sides clean and it looks good to me. I etched in FC and can see layers nicely, but it was hard to photo. I got a photo of the side sanded with 400 grit and looks pretty good to me.
Here's a view of the side shot with phone.
Now to decide if I wish to draw it out plain, or try something fancy like raindrop or ladder. I understand both those are done the same way, a bar across for ladder or a hole part way thru the billet for raindrop? I expect the side needs to be clean like it was to be welded so the holes/bars will close up without voids?
A question, will the nickel layers weaken the bond between the 15N20 and 1095? Would it be better not to try a twist?