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Thread: Knife from railway spike info.
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11th Sep 2016, 06:00 PM #1Senior Member
- Join Date
- Jun 2011
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- gold coast
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Knife from railway spike info.
Hi,
I'm hoping someone can offer me some advice on making a knife from an old railway spike.
I accompanied my dear wife for a trip on the Savannalander (west of Cairns) and picked up a couple of old spikes laying beside the lines.
There were dozens beside the tracks where old sleepers had been replaced over the years.
I have tried a file on them and they are certainly harder than black steel.
Ive made a few knives over the years, some from pattern welded damascus Ive forged myself and some from 1045 or similar/
I have always shied away from second hand steel since its not worth the effort to produce a blade that wont keep an edge.
So with that being said---has anyone any experience in forging a blade form a railway spike and is the result worth the effort?
Thanks in advance for any help or guidance
Brian
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11th Sep 2016, 07:30 PM #2Pink 10EE owner
- Join Date
- Aug 2008
- Location
- near Rockhampton
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- 6,218
I doubt it will be successful as I doubt their carbon content is that high. At the most it would be no higher then structural steel. The spikes have to be hammered in, so they are not going to have that high a carbon content.
Gold, the colour of choice for the discerning person.
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11th Sep 2016, 08:57 PM #3
According to specifications set forth by American Railway Engineering Association there are two classes of railroad spikes, low carbon track spikes used on straight sections of railroads and high carbon steel track spikes used on curves and switches. According to the specifications, low carbon spikes may contain no more than 0.12% carbon and "High Carbon" spikes may contain NO MORE THAN 0.30% carbon.
Knife blade steels typically contain between 0.85% and 1.5% carbon, or 3-5 times as much carbon as a "High Carbon" railroad spike.
Your railway spike knife may make a decorative knife like a letter opener but won't be hard enough for use as a real knife.
Grahame
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12th Sep 2016, 05:42 PM #4Senior Member
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- Jun 2011
- Location
- gold coast
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Thanks Grahame and RC, I appreciate your input and it saves me from 'wasting' time on a doomed project.
I guess I can use them for deep sea fishing sinkers
regards
Bria
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27th Sep 2016, 07:56 AM #5Member
- Join Date
- Feb 2013
- Location
- Picton NSW
- Posts
- 82
I made two knives from two different Aussie spikes and tested them on my bench top Rockwell tester yesterday.
Both were water quenched and not tempered.
One came in at 18 Rockwell and the other 45 Rockwell.
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