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by Animats 604 days ago
DIY knife forging is common. Search "knife forging". Look around for classes and forges with training. There's a huge amount of info on knife making and metallurgy. People obsess on this stuff. A good knife is a trick of metallurgy. The blade must be hard at the edge to be sharp but ductile in the body so as not to be brittle. How to do this is well understood today, but there was much mystery around it for centuries. If you're fascinated by metalworking, but don't have to make machine parts, that's a hobby direction.

Victorinox knife manufacture.[1] Stamp, heat treat, grind, polish. They're not exotic blades, just good manufactured stainless steel parts.

A primer on machining titanium.[2]

[1] https://www.popularmechanics.com/adventure/outdoor-gear/a351...

[2] https://www.harveyperformance.com/in-the-loupe/titanium-mach...

1 comments

Sure, knife forging is one thing, but the idea of making replacement blades for folding knives sounds like it takes machining, because of the weird shapes needed at the pivot end, especially for weird locking mechanisms. It would be nice to be able to do that at a semi-commercial level if one were to get into it at all. Victorinox is on a completely different scale, making millions of units of whatever. But forging is for making one or two of something, while CNC machining is interesting for making a few hundred.

In practice I don't have it in me to pursue something like that for real. It's just interesting to find out about.

If I simply wanted to make knives, then no machining would be needed, just some cutting discs and belt sanders. It's the specific thought of making replacement blades for existing folders that seems to want more automation. I guess there are existing shops that can do that type of thing from a CAD drawing though.

We (ob. discl., I work for Carbide 3D) have a video series on doing this:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G5TYla5x-Nk

Thanks! That looks like just what I want. I looked at the first few seconds just now, and will watch the whole thing later.