Outdoor Life Prepare for Anything Survival Manual (64 page)

BOOK: Outdoor Life Prepare for Anything Survival Manual
11.64Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
311
Forge Your Own Knife

There are plenty of projects you can do with a blacksmith’s forge and tools, but one of the simplest and most useful ones—and a good traditional way to get some practice—is making a blacksmith’s knife. All you’ll need are a few tools and a piece of steel (like an old file, a railroad spike, or a bit of leaf spring from a truck’s suspension).

YOU’LL NEED

Steel piece

Tongs

Hammer or small sledge

File or grinder

Oil

Sharpening stone

Forge and anvil

STEP 1
Fire up your forge and heat the steel in the coals until it’s at about 2,200°F (1,200°C). It will be a pale yellow-white color.

STEP 2
Using tongs, pick up the metal and hammer it on the anvil to flatten it and begin making one side of the knife’s edge.

STEP 3
Reheat as needed, and work on both sides to prevent distorting the steel. Save a good chunk at one end for a handle.

STEP 4
Continue forging the blade’s point by hammering in small taps to shape the metal, and then give the opposite side a bevel by hammering near the point.

STEP 5
Once you have a rough blade shape, reheat to red-hot a few times and let cool, then leave it to cool overnight as the coals die down. Grind or file the blade into shape.

STEP 6
Refire the forge and heat the blade until it’s very hot as in Step 1, then dip into a pan of oil to harden. Let the blade rest in low heat for about an hour to temper the metal.

Other books

The Fifth Magic (Book 1) by Brian Rathbone
Black Orchids by Stout, Rex
Lovers' Dance by Carr, K
Chalados y chamba by Marcus Sedgwick
Influential Magic by Deanna Chase
Dance For The Devil by S. Kodejs