One of the most beautiful looking Katanas I've ever seen. It actually looks like a modern, beefy, heavy duty Katana made to chop off human limbs (in some alternate universe where that's still done)... as opposed to one of those decoratively slim & ultra curvy from classic-Katana-making Japanese periods.
Great job ! One of the best options for making a blade. Excellent geometry and architecture. The width of the fuller is very well chosen. Thank you for a pleasant viewing! 👍
Exceptional work. Your getting really really good at this craft. I love the wootz steel work you use pretty much exclusively. I’ve been following for some time now.
Minunată muncă! Atent la detalii! Dar nu cred ca oțelu din burghie e un material asa de bun! Poate e un secret, ai mai pus ceva acolo! Respect si apreciere! Chiar ai reusit? Pe o parte moale, pe o parte dură si ascuțită? Si flexibilă! Felicitări! O imagine cu tine, nu mă supăra! Ești bun!
I'm impressed with the detail you put into the koshirae! The tsuba alone gets very messy and complicated when you decide to add detail to an iron tsuba, let alone a brass or copper one, but your's came out looking fantastic! Could I ask why you decided against the traditional katana's differential heat treatment? I don't know the properties of wootz steel intimately, I'm curious if the material had anything to do with that decision. Regardless, it's a beautiful piece!
Another great video and another great blade like the mix of drills there was a couple cobalt in the mix ,that billet sounded so hard when you first hammered it .your fit and finish is amazing
Very cool. This is actually one of the traditional katana grinds, though one from a more recent period during the meiji transition. I appreciate the bevels on the top. Too many people forget about them, but practically all traditional katana designs feature this grind on the spine of the blade.
👏👍 Impressive craftsmanship! It's amazing how skilled you are at forging wootz steel and turning old drills into a beautiful katana. I've been a follower for a while now, and it's great to see your progress and dedication to your craft. Keep up the great work!
Wonderful, I really appreciate everything. There is one thing that can also be dangerous, the peg of the mekugi-ana is always made of wood because the metal can break or deform.
Your work is amazing! I’m retired now, and can put much more time into my passion and would love to learn to make wootz. Do you have videos showing the process from beginning to end of making wootz?
Beautiful. I was wondering if when you ground dimples into the brass if it was for decoration, or if it was to replicate an original katana, and if it were, would it have been ground in, or penned to cold harden it our something.
Great vid as always. Like the blade. Out of curiousity, do you anneal the brass before workin it? It makes it much easier ti bend/form. And what solder are you using on it?
This is really cool. I would love to also see demonstrations of toughness and flexibility. I have friends who see your work and they are doubtful, because it is such a hard metal in the end. I would like them to be able to see just how flexible and tough this kind of steel is too.
This blade is sadly going to snap, both beacause he used a lot of drill bits (HSS steel, basically very hard but brittle, made to cut, not to bend), and the steel powder he added might not have been enough to reduce the carbon and alloying elements enough to get back to a more medium carbon steel. Historically, katanas were about 0.55% carbon, sometimes more. That's not a lot, but that's enough to make a good hard but tough blade. Then, his temper was too unequal, being blue at the base (that's good, the base of the blade needs to be souple and forgiving), but then too cold on the middle, and then too hot again where you use the blade to cut. Basically his blade is both softer than it could have been at the striking point, and more fragile than it could have been right in the middle. Wootz also doesn't have the properties of modern steel, the grain pattern we see is also sign of poor homogeneity, but it's nice to look at, and back in the days it was better than usual folded steel.
@@jeanladoire4141 As you may observe from the carbide patterns after the nital, much of the steel is far lower in carbon than the overall carbon content would account for. There's a lot of carbon in the rafts of carbide nanospheres and nanowires. In short, yes, that's the conventional wisdom, but the final product is not homogeneous and may have unexpected properties. The only way to see is experiment.
I mean yes that's how wootz works, it has crystals of very high carbon steel, and crystals of iron. But i wouldn't say that's quite enough to make it tough in the middle after a quench.
@@jeanladoire4141 That's why I would like to see a demonstration. :) I want to see the properties of the item, as opposed to what you would say about it.
It's always a joy to watch you work, sir. One question - is the final connection between the blade and the handle just that single pin, or did you also include some epoxy? I didn't see anything else, and wondered if that single pin would be sufficient on its own.
As many on here, thank you for sharing, I have been watching this channel for a while. I am curious how long is your ‘cooking time in your oven’? Does it vary for the mass in the crucible? Or is it consistent based upon your method? Again I enjoy your posts thanks for giving us your artistry in such a time as this. May you and yours stay safe and healthy…
What is the metal powder you used, what is the white material? Also if you crush the container can you reform/refire it or do you have to always sacrifice and buy a new one?
Can you give me a little run down on why everything is added to the crucible? i know when you make Wootz from scratch you need to add a specific amount of carbon to the raw iron materials to get steel, but you start off with a previously made high quality material like these drill bits. wouldnt adding graphite to the mix just add more carbon and essentially turn it into brittle cast iron? the steel powder is obviously to bulp out the ingot, and my guess on the glass would be it acts as a bit of flux to help melt and collect impurities. i guess im just curious about the graphite.
I really liked the video. I am just wondering why you didn't do differential hardening on the blade hence making a Hamon Line? I only ask because you were making a Katana and that was kinda a big thing with them.
Another amazing project/piece! You make it all look so easy! What was the material that you place in the Wootz container after the powdered steel/before the glass? Thanks again for taking us along!
I believe it was graphite to add carbon to the steel and the liquified glass floats on the surface, allowing outgassing to escape and stopping air from getting in and contaminating the refined metal. I did notice how much harder the wootz ingot is to work compared to standard steel, so his blades are definitely up there!
Wouldn't quenching it compromise it's durability? I mean it's carbon content is already pretty high since it's wootz and quenching it would just harden it making it more brittle🙄
It turned out very nice i like how precise your work is! I would like to ask you do you only charge the furnace with coal once or add more later on? Thank you
Did you measure the hardness of the knives and swords you made from crucible steel? What is the degree of hardness? We want to see the weight and endurance test. Has the cast turned into steel?
Thanks for watching, do not forget to like and subscribe to the channel.
Of course
You have a golden hands!! I really want to buy your KATANA!!!
May I suggest you use a traditional test cutting on realistic targets. I hear Orc makes a good test medium.
One of the most beautiful looking Katanas I've ever seen. It actually looks like a modern, beefy, heavy duty Katana made to chop off human limbs (in some alternate universe where that's still done)... as opposed to one of those decoratively slim & ultra curvy from classic-Katana-making Japanese periods.
The best boss
They say that the soul of a blacksmith is reflected in his work. Your Katana is truly beautiful. You should be proud.
Your wootz skills are amazing. Not to long ago wootz remained a mystery, you have really fine tuned your craft. Bravo!
Just so you know, the like on the press worked for me. Your videos are very therapeutic for me. Thanks 😃
Great job ! One of the best options for making a blade. Excellent geometry and architecture. The width of the fuller is very well chosen. Thank you for a pleasant viewing! 👍
Thanks 👍
Voir vos tutoriels est toujours aussi captivant, tant vous excellez dans votre domaine. 👍
That wootz steel is so beautiful!
Exceptional work. Your getting really really good at this craft. I love the wootz steel work you use pretty much exclusively. I’ve been following for some time now.
Сверло состоит из быстрореза и хвостовика из сыромятины. Крайняя хрень получается....
@@iivani4I would like to see you do better than this
Excelente trabajo!! Saludos desde Uruguay
Man i like the smoke grey color of the blade‼️ excellent work
Absolutely incredible. Very beautiful. ~Kevin
Thanks
Have been watching you for awhile. Inspiring. Learn constantly...
Головне не зупиняйтеся! Як завжди вподобайка і подяка за відео! Робота супер!!!
Beautiful sword Beautifully made well done
Thanks 👍
The video i needed to my holiday.
Awesome result for that katana! Really nicely done! 👍
Thanks
Un trabajo impresionante 👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽💯💯💯💯💯💯 saludos desde Argentina 🇦🇷
Замечательная работа!
As always your fit and finish is outta this world 🌎 😮
Beautiful work!... A master katana maker!...
Thanks
Another beautiful work of art!!
Thanks 👍
Комментарий в поддержку канала и ролика, а также труда мастера.
Minunată muncă! Atent la detalii! Dar nu cred ca oțelu din burghie e un material asa de bun! Poate e un secret, ai mai pus ceva acolo! Respect si apreciere! Chiar ai reusit? Pe o parte moale, pe o parte dură si ascuțită? Si flexibilă! Felicitări! O imagine cu tine, nu mă supăra! Ești bun!
Great video. Love from Vietnam!
Great katana made video,
สร้างสรรค์งานได้ยอดเยี่ยมมาก สวยงามไม่มีที่ติ ขอคารวะ
My best part is when you using that machine ❤️ I love that👍
I'm impressed with the detail you put into the koshirae! The tsuba alone gets very messy and complicated when you decide to add detail to an iron tsuba, let alone a brass or copper one, but your's came out looking fantastic! Could I ask why you decided against the traditional katana's differential heat treatment? I don't know the properties of wootz steel intimately, I'm curious if the material had anything to do with that decision. Regardless, it's a beautiful piece!
Amazing results! I love your channel.
Thoroughly enjoyed watching this , great looking Sword. ❤
Absolutely gorgeous!
❤
Good job 👏👍
Another great video and another great blade like the mix of drills there was a couple cobalt in the mix ,that billet sounded so hard when you first hammered it .your fit and finish is amazing
Very cool. This is actually one of the traditional katana grinds, though one from a more recent period during the meiji transition. I appreciate the bevels on the top. Too many people forget about them, but practically all traditional katana designs feature this grind on the spine of the blade.
Not even close to how a katana is traditionally made
@@manuelf2984read, "grinds" as in how the bevel was grinded nowhere did it say made.
This is a beautiful sword 😀😀
Thanks
👏👍 Impressive craftsmanship! It's amazing how skilled you are at forging wootz steel and turning old drills into a beautiful katana. I've been a follower for a while now, and it's great to see your progress and dedication to your craft. Keep up the great work!
Beautiful work mate!!!!!
Wonderful, I really appreciate everything. There is one thing that can also be dangerous, the peg of the mekugi-ana is always made of wood because the metal can break or deform.
gorgeous!!!
Excellent work.
Thanks
What a beauty FZ. What a beauty. ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
Thanks 👍
Spectacular Katana !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Це не "old drills", а "new drills"..))
Дякуємо за майстерність!..👏👏
Krásna práca ďakujem za poučné videá❤❤
Impressive as always
Uma Obra de arte supimpas. Parabéns!!!
не плохо !!! респект и процветания !!!
Most Beatifull Video #Greatprocess
Шикарно, спасибо за видео, сколько по времени трудились над этим творением?
Great job, congratulations
Thanks 👍
Thanks 👍
Wow... that was truly great work 🙂👍
.
WONDERFUL!
Thanks
Really good job.
I love this 😀 katana
Very nice build absolutely love it 👍
Very nice 👍🙂👍🙂👍
Thanks 👍
Your work is amazing! I’m retired now, and can put much more time into my passion and would love to learn to make wootz. Do you have videos showing the process from beginning to end of making wootz?
Al Pendray wrote a book that provides a good overview of the process (as he recreated it), and there are some more detailed resources out there too.
Amazing work
Thanks
Beautiful job!!!
¿Cuales son los ingredientes? Podrás ponerlos en los próximos videos. Excelente video, Muchas gracias. Saludos desde Campana, Buenos Aires, Argentina.
Beautiful. I was wondering if when you ground dimples into the brass if it was for decoration, or if it was to replicate an original katana, and if it were, would it have been ground in, or penned to cold harden it our something.
awesome katana
beautiful katanan ❤❤❤❤
Thanks
Great vid as always. Like the blade. Out of curiousity, do you anneal the brass before workin it? It makes it much easier ti bend/form. And what solder are you using on it?
This is really cool. I would love to also see demonstrations of toughness and flexibility. I have friends who see your work and they are doubtful, because it is such a hard metal in the end. I would like them to be able to see just how flexible and tough this kind of steel is too.
This blade is sadly going to snap, both beacause he used a lot of drill bits (HSS steel, basically very hard but brittle, made to cut, not to bend), and the steel powder he added might not have been enough to reduce the carbon and alloying elements enough to get back to a more medium carbon steel. Historically, katanas were about 0.55% carbon, sometimes more. That's not a lot, but that's enough to make a good hard but tough blade. Then, his temper was too unequal, being blue at the base (that's good, the base of the blade needs to be souple and forgiving), but then too cold on the middle, and then too hot again where you use the blade to cut. Basically his blade is both softer than it could have been at the striking point, and more fragile than it could have been right in the middle. Wootz also doesn't have the properties of modern steel, the grain pattern we see is also sign of poor homogeneity, but it's nice to look at, and back in the days it was better than usual folded steel.
@@jeanladoire4141 As you may observe from the carbide patterns after the nital, much of the steel is far lower in carbon than the overall carbon content would account for. There's a lot of carbon in the rafts of carbide nanospheres and nanowires.
In short, yes, that's the conventional wisdom, but the final product is not homogeneous and may have unexpected properties. The only way to see is experiment.
I mean yes that's how wootz works, it has crystals of very high carbon steel, and crystals of iron. But i wouldn't say that's quite enough to make it tough in the middle after a quench.
@@jeanladoire4141 That's why I would like to see a demonstration. :) I want to see the properties of the item, as opposed to what you would say about it.
Hey 👋 man how you doing bro I'm in love with this katana inpecable 👍🗡️
Что тут скажешь? Работа Мастера🔥
It's always a joy to watch you work, sir. One question - is the final connection between the blade and the handle just that single pin, or did you also include some epoxy? I didn't see anything else, and wondered if that single pin would be sufficient on its own.
Dope AF!
As many on here, thank you for sharing, I have been watching this channel for a while. I am curious how long is your ‘cooking time in your oven’? Does it vary for the mass in the crucible? Or is it consistent based upon your method? Again I enjoy your posts thanks for giving us your artistry in such a time as this. May you and yours stay safe and healthy…
Beautiful result!
SUPER 💯👍
Thanks
Complimenti, lavoro veramente stupendo, per bravura e accuratezza sei il migliore. Peccato solo per la scelta del colore del nastro.
Amazing work... Would you mind to tell me what paste do you use for polishing?
What is the metal powder you used, what is the white material? Also if you crush the container can you reform/refire it or do you have to always sacrifice and buy a new one?
Very nice
Daqui do Goiás Jaraguá Brazil agente diz Bisurdo de bao parabéns professor
Can you give me a little run down on why everything is added to the crucible? i know when you make Wootz from scratch you need to add a specific amount of carbon to the raw iron materials to get steel, but you start off with a previously made high quality material like these drill bits. wouldnt adding graphite to the mix just add more carbon and essentially turn it into brittle cast iron? the steel powder is obviously to bulp out the ingot, and my guess on the glass would be it acts as a bit of flux to help melt and collect impurities. i guess im just curious about the graphite.
Perfect!
belo trabalho parabens
Amazing katana! I'd like to get into wootz making myself one day.
Quá tuyệt vời luôn 👍👍👍
While not strictly “Traditional” it’s exquisite work…. I want one but reverse edge. And can you make a matching sheath?
คุณเก่งมาก👍
I really liked the video.
I am just wondering why you didn't do differential hardening on the blade hence making a Hamon Line?
I only ask because you were making a Katana and that was kinda a big thing with them.
Hello, Great idea, I am very impressed and very interested. Which products are added to the drills before melting them ?
Меч витвір мистецтва.
Great video. Where do you get your crucibles or how do you make them?
That is an incredible blade!
MAGIC SWORD FOR GODS AND AMAZONES ⚔️
Why won't the iron bar break?The lines you drew are so beautiful
Another amazing project/piece! You make it all look so easy! What was the material that you place in the Wootz container after the powdered steel/before the glass? Thanks again for taking us along!
I believe it was graphite to add carbon to the steel and the liquified glass floats on the surface, allowing outgassing to escape and stopping air from getting in and contaminating the refined metal.
I did notice how much harder the wootz ingot is to work compared to standard steel, so his blades are definitely up there!
Чувак, ты крут!
can you make celurit, one of the typical weapons from Indonesia
Senjata elek, cocok dinggo ngaret. Dont make it, not weapon but just a farming tool.
Wkwkwk, iki do lapo tah 🤣🤣🤣
Ora iso
Buat sabit rumput kasih kambeengg
Weapon for preman kampung cuukk... 😁😂😂
Wouldn't quenching it compromise it's durability? I mean it's carbon content is already pretty high since it's wootz and quenching it would just harden it making it more brittle🙄
Робота пречудова, але як на мене руків'я дуже яскраве. Але всеодно катана виглядає чудово
It turned out very nice i like how precise your work is!
I would like to ask you do you only charge the furnace with coal once or add more later on? Thank you
Превосходно!!!
Gorgeous work! I have some questions about wootz steel. Are you going to Atlanta Georgia in June 2to4 for the blade show?
Did you measure the hardness of the knives and swords you made from crucible steel? What is the degree of hardness? We want to see the weight and endurance test. Has the cast turned into steel?