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Custom round knife specs

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Hi there,

I'm having a blacksmith I know make me a head knife. He said he needed some more info:

-knife edge type (full flat or chisel grind or something else?)

-blade thicknes

-on what distance from edge is it grinded

I dont know much about knives and head knives arent really a thing here I could check.

Also I gave him some general measurments 13,5 cm (5 1/4inch) from point to point and 15cm (6 inch) from crown to end handle, is that good?

 

Thanks in advance 

 

 

91523152_2821537367922525_70745554543443968_n.jpg

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I made mine with a v grind  on about a 2.5mm saw blade , the bevel is about 5mm.  or roughly 12 to 14 degree angle. about 4" point to point

tools2.JPG

Edited by chuck123wapati

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Nice job Chuck

 

I look forward to seeing your knife when it is done Kovac

 

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19 hours ago, Ferryman said:

Nice job Chuck

 

I look forward to seeing your knife when it is done Kovac

 

Thank you

 

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I made myself a head knife that works okay. I used a grind similar to Chuck's and even when it's shaving sharp it seems like it takes a lot more effort than it should. Over on bladeforums.com there is a custom knife/leatherworker that goes by the screen name Horsewright. He makes and sells head knives that get rave reviews from his customers. He uses a full flat grind that goes all the way from the edge to the junction of the handle and body. I don't know if that steep of a grind is necessary but it makes them cut like a laser with almost no effort. (According to what I've read)

'

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I agree with the friend that AKGUY59 mentions; I think you should have a long grind or bevel that goes from the cutting edge towards the main part of the knife in a gradual, even slope

A while ago I bought a George Barnsley head knife, which is similar to a round knife, but has only one point. To keep the costs down they only give you a basic cutting edge, you are expected to do the final sharpening and polishing yourself. I spent an afternoon with oil stones, very fine wet & dry paper, and a strop. When I finally got the cutting edge I wanted there was a smooth, even transition into the main part of the knife, with no step or shoulder to the bevel

Search YouTube for round knives and you'll see what other people are using. I think that most of them will have this smooth, gradual slope with no noticeable step. I think this is called a flat grind. 

There will be several videos about round knives, but have a look at these, which show them well -

How to polish a round knife by Leathercraft Masterclass

How to hold and use a round knife by UK Saddlery

Round knife sharpening by Leathertoolz

How to sharpen your head knife for leather work by JH Leather. At about 1 min to 1 min 10 sec there is a diagram showing the cross section of the blade and cutting edge

My Barnsley knife is about 1,5mm thick. This is a bit thin but adequate as this is a small knife. For anything larger I would go for 2,0mm thick

The size of a round knife is measured by the distance, or the span, between the points, and is typically 120 to 150mm

Then there is the depth of the blade, sometimes called the belly. Some are shallow, like a crescent, and some are deeper, more like a full semicircle . You can get an idea of the size you want from watching videos, but only you can decide on the size of your knife; why not make some mock - ups from stiff card, then you could give your preferred shape to your friend

You could also Search Google for round knives by makers like Osborne and Vergez - Blanchard, to see the sort of things they make

 

 

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Thank you all very much for the replies, I think he has enough info now. I'll be sure to post when its finished.

 

Cheers

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Here are a few pictures and some measurements that may be helpful for you.  

I have two antique knives that I use, both 100+ years old.  The larger is a Gomph, and the smaller a CS Osborne Newark.  

They are both a bit over 1.5mm near the ferrule, and a little under 1mm at around 10mm from the cutting edge.

They both have their advantages.  The Gomph works a little better for long straight-ish cuts, and the Osborne works a little better doing curves using the tip of the blade.    

As for sharpening, a V grind or Convex is going to be the way to go.  V grind will probably be easier for you to maintain using stones.  A convex edge is fine, but a slack belt sander would make re-doing your edge easier if that ever needs to be done.

I use an angle of about 15 to 17 degrees on each side, yielding an angle of 30 to 35 degrees for the overall edge.

 

20200328_120256.jpg

20200330_071110.jpg

Edited by billybopp

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On 3/27/2020 at 11:45 AM, chuck123wapati said:

I made mine with a v grind  on about a 2.5mm saw blade , the bevel is about 5mm.  or roughly 12 to 14 degree angle. about 4" point to point

tools2.JPG

I just ordered a piece of steel to make a skiving knife.  About what angle did you make yours?  At first I thought 45 was good but the more I see the more it looks like a little more is common.

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13 hours ago, Clintonville Leather said:

I just ordered a piece of steel to make a skiving knife.  About what angle did you make yours?  At first I thought 45 was good but the more I see the more it looks like a little more is common.

That one is about 50 degree angle but skiving knives come in a number of different angles from 90 degree to a slightly radiused 90  and some at 45 or less. It depends on what you are doing with it I guess, I have found that skiving straps/ belt ends and such a 90 degree works about the best, I use a wood chisel for those lol. This does a good job on larger edges, cut out and trimming but if I ever get around to changing the angle it will be at about 40 or I might just round the bottom edge a bit more.  I actually made it originally to get glued down linoleum off my kitchen floor but found it works well for many other chores like leather. If I were going to make one strictly for leather work , and I will, it probably would be a radiused 90  or straight 90,  with a chisel edge. Shoot me a picture when you finish I would love to see it! 

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4 hours ago, chuck123wapati said:

That one is about 50 degree angle but skiving knives come in a number of different angles from 90 degree to a slightly radiused 90  and some at 45 or less. It depends on what you are doing with it I guess, I have found that skiving straps/ belt ends and such a 90 degree works about the best, I use a wood chisel for those lol. This does a good job on larger edges, cut out and trimming but if I ever get around to changing the angle it will be at about 40 or I might just round the bottom edge a bit more.  I actually made it originally to get glued down linoleum off my kitchen floor but found it works well for many other chores like leather. If I were going to make one strictly for leather work , and I will, it probably would be a radiused 90  or straight 90,  with a chisel edge. Shoot me a picture when you finish I would love to see it! 

Thank you, I have some steel coming soon.  I have a bench splitter for belts I just wanted to make something for turned edges.  

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On 4/4/2020 at 10:12 AM, chuck123wapati said:

That one is about 50 degree angle but skiving knives come in a number of different angles from 90 degree to a slightly radiused 90  and some at 45 or less. It depends on what you are doing with it I guess, I have found that skiving straps/ belt ends and such a 90 degree works about the best, I use a wood chisel for those lol. This does a good job on larger edges, cut out and trimming but if I ever get around to changing the angle it will be at about 40 or I might just round the bottom edge a bit more.  I actually made it originally to get glued down linoleum off my kitchen floor but found it works well for many other chores like leather. If I were going to make one strictly for leather work , and I will, it probably would be a radiused 90  or straight 90,  with a chisel edge. Shoot me a picture when you finish I would love to see it! 

I got a 1" x 1/8" x6" piece of o1.  Put about a 30 degree angle in it and a 10 degree bevel.  Heat treated and tempered then sharpened and polished to 8,000.  It shaves and skives about 3/16" wide but I am having trouble doing any sort of wide skive I could fold.  I can tell it likes to slice at an angle greater than 30 degrees.  I think my bevel is too small and the steel is too thick.  I will mess with it more.  I can tell it will take a lot of tinkering to figure out.  Good news is I think I will make a trim knife since the knife making part was easy enough.  Took up most of an evening but it was educational.  The tip got nicked a so I can see how rounding that would be useful, wont really be cutting with that part anyway.

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1 hour ago, Clintonville Leather said:

I got a 1" x 1/8" x6" piece of o1.  Put about a 30 degree angle in it and a 10 degree bevel.  Heat treated and tempered then sharpened and polished to 8,000.  It shaves and skives about 3/16" wide but I am having trouble doing any sort of wide skive I could fold.  I can tell it likes to slice at an angle greater than 30 degrees.  I think my bevel is too small and the steel is too thick.  I will mess with it more.  I can tell it will take a lot of tinkering to figure out.  Good news is I think I will make a trim knife since the knife making part was easy enough.  Took up most of an evening but it was educational.  The tip got nicked a so I can see how rounding that would be useful, wont really be cutting with that part anyway.

Scratch that, it just wasnt sharp enough.  Arm shaving isnt enough, hair popping glides through like butter.

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10 hours ago, Clintonville Leather said:

Scratch that, it just wasnt sharp enough.  Arm shaving isnt enough, hair popping glides through like butter.

cool, lets see that work! 

 

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On 4/8/2020 at 11:09 AM, chuck123wapati said:

cool, lets see that work! 

 

Sorry I havent been on recently.  I think I can load a picture.  It isnt pretty but it cuts well.  I am still having trouble skiving enough to turn a 5oz edge though.  Well, it says the file is too big let me try and shrink it

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13 hours ago, Clintonville Leather said:

Super basic but it slices

20200421_200129.jpg

That's a nice edge and grind you did it should do just fine.

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On 4/22/2020 at 9:54 AM, chuck123wapati said:

That's a nice edge and grind you did it should do just fine.

Thank you, I think I will make a trim knife next.  Save money on the disposable blades.

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Clintonville, what did you use to heat it to harden it? The steel shows signs of having been overheated. I'm only saying this because I just did the same thing when I made my (round) knives, soaked them too long in the forge!

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6 hours ago, dikman said:

Clintonville, what did you use to heat it to harden it? The steel shows signs of having been overheated. I'm only saying this because I just did the same thing when I made my (round) knives, soaked them too long in the forge!

I'm getting the urge to feel that dragons breath myself now lol. Maybe time to spoil myself with a new skiver also.

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12 minutes ago, chuck123wapati said:

I'm getting the urge to feel that dragons breath myself now lol. Maybe time to spoil myself with a new skiver also.

Need any RR spikes? 

 

 

quench it in oil

Edited by Frodo

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12 minutes ago, Frodo said:

Need any RR spikes? 

I have plenty of those thanks! Live on the up line lol. Photod Big boy last year when it came through. Union Pacific 4014 is a steam locomotive owned and operated by the Union Pacific Railroad. It is a four-cylinder simple articulated 4-8-8-4 "Big Boy" type built in 1941 by the American Locomotive Company (ALCO) of Schenectady, New York. No. 4014 is the only operating Big Boy of the eight that remain in existence.

steamer1.JPG

Edited by chuck123wapati
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What a beast!!. That's one thing I like about my coke forge, it makes me think of steam trains.:lol:

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On 5/1/2020 at 1:32 AM, dikman said:

Clintonville, what did you use to heat it to harden it? The steel shows signs of having been overheated. I'm only saying this because I just did the same thing when I made my (round) knives, soaked them too long in the forge!

It may have been overheated.  I heated it in a propane forge to just past magnetic.  I dont have any high temp thermometers.

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