Blacksmith basics. Forging a railroad spike knife

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Пікірлер: 47

  • @MSmith-jf5wo
    @MSmith-jf5wo19 күн бұрын

    Made one a few years (more than 40) ago, and heli-arked some hard face rod on the edge after profiling. Held a Good edge...! Had a 61 RC Hardness! (Yes, I'm "Old School"...! That's before they started calling it TIG Welding!). Lol

  • @curtisellis8509
    @curtisellis8509Ай бұрын

    Thanks man! It’s not that I really needed the permission to slap somebody into oblivion, but it’s always nice when I don’t have to worry with: “better to ask for forgiveness than permission”. Your comment made me laugh! Keep up the strong work

  • @curtisellis8509

    @curtisellis8509

    Ай бұрын

    He said cyber bully, but I heard slap.

  • @Vikingwerk
    @VikingwerkАй бұрын

    Something i’ve been thinking about, (as soon as I get the 220v fixed in my shop), is forging the rough blade out of a spike, then clamping it to some copper, and running a bead of hard surfacing rod along the blade edge real fast, then grinding out the blade, just to have a semi-decent edge with minimum effort.

  • @ronthacker211
    @ronthacker211Ай бұрын

    A local RR repair crew supvr not only let me have some used Ties, he also let me pick up old Spikes. I ended up with 18 Ties and a 5 gal bucket half full of spikes.

  • @brysonalden5414
    @brysonalden5414Ай бұрын

    That's how I got started also. I still sell about 20 of these a year, but I market them as letter openers, not knives. Don't want my knife customers to get the idea I don't know the difference between a spike and 1084!

  • @kylongrifle
    @kylongrifleАй бұрын

    Love the video man, like you said it takes me back. We sold a buttload of these things at craftshows over the years.. I explained to every person who bought one about the steel it was made from but not one ever cared. All they cared about was it was "made from a RR spike"... I live in Eastern,Ky which is coal country and by extension Railroad country so they were a good selling item.. In fact I bought my first "real" grinder an old Coote 2x72 way back with sales from spike knives.. I got mine from a local scrap yard that had the a scrap contract with the RR... Great video bud

  • @HeavyForge
    @HeavyForgeАй бұрын

    Excellent work John! As I’m watching I’m looking in the background of your shop and thinking “damn that’s a lot of axe heads! And it looks clean and well organized” Also looks like a beautiful area you live in. I’ve never been to the east coast, maybe one day.

  • @justin_ray
    @justin_rayАй бұрын

    Great stuff John. Love your content and it's nice to have someone out in YT land with a similar sense of humor 🤣

  • @gatorcreekcustomknives321
    @gatorcreekcustomknives321Ай бұрын

    Great content, and excellent work as always John!!!

  • @JasonHollowayMetalworkin-lx2qc
    @JasonHollowayMetalworkin-lx2qcАй бұрын

    John, just wanted to say thank you for this video and all of the others you have made. Sharing your passion and the free education you've provided has been super beneficial for my growth in my metalworking journey!

  • @russellvonastel7111
    @russellvonastel7111Ай бұрын

    Some of the most beautiful functional knives,the price excludes most mortals

  • @rom15051980
    @rom15051980Ай бұрын

    крутая кукурука получилась!

  • @matthewchapman6309
    @matthewchapman6309Ай бұрын

    I love your videos and I always appreciate products that minimize waste

  • @richardbryant7972
    @richardbryant7972Ай бұрын

    It’s funny I just made a spike knife with 1095 insert haven’t made one in years , just felt like doing one.

  • @GrampasBlacksmithing
    @GrampasBlacksmithingАй бұрын

    You can buy them at a reasonable price from Kens custom iron.

  • @6Sally5

    @6Sally5

    Ай бұрын

    Ken’s also sells RR spike twisting wrenches…though I’ve found the slots a bit too wide, but they work.

  • @Little_River_Forge
    @Little_River_ForgeАй бұрын

    This is my go to channel to binge watch. I can’t wait for new content. Keep on keepin’ on brother 🤘 -Joe Dirte’

  • @StrayWolfForge
    @StrayWolfForgeАй бұрын

    Thanks for the video, I have always thought you made some of the best-looking spike knives out there.

  • @jmbstudio6873
    @jmbstudio6873Ай бұрын

    Nice job.

  • @tango-bravo
    @tango-bravoАй бұрын

    Nice work man!

  • @magnusbergroth5319
    @magnusbergroth5319Ай бұрын

    👍 Great video!

  • @gregchapman2634
    @gregchapman2634Ай бұрын

    Great video!

  • @multicoloredwiz
    @multicoloredwizАй бұрын

    Those rope looking ones are my faves, they're so damn cool!

  • @jdcole2112
    @jdcole2112Ай бұрын

    Love the content !!!

  • @USMCRabbit
    @USMCRabbitАй бұрын

    The handle on that top one looks really cool!

  • @j.c.5480
    @j.c.5480Ай бұрын

    Man, tracks near my work have spikes just laying all around. Pretty sure they just toss 'em aside after replacing them. I might need to capitalize on this...

  • @BrandonGuise
    @BrandonGuiseАй бұрын

    Awesome!

  • @politianospolitis862
    @politianospolitis862Ай бұрын

    Thank you for the video

  • @scrobeaa
    @scrobeaaАй бұрын

    Great Video, it's always a pleasure

  • @TooTall553
    @TooTall553Ай бұрын

    Thanks John outstanding video 👏👍

  • @rodmullen64
    @rodmullen64Ай бұрын

    Oof here i am with 300 of them that i picked up on my daily walks..... whoops

  • @mikezbr

    @mikezbr

    19 күн бұрын

    Same here. Just came back with a bucket.

  • @johnoconnor4941
    @johnoconnor4941Ай бұрын

    Behind every great forger is a policeman usually or a queue of chancers, lol. Would it be possible to, after completing a blade and before grinding, to drill and insert ball bearings? I'm thinking that star constellations could be part of the design. Just a thought...

  • @garthowens9276
    @garthowens9276Ай бұрын

    Surveyors use and buy them for benchmarks all the time. I get mine from work.

  • @jaroslavspano4412
    @jaroslavspano4412Ай бұрын

    👍

  • @GrampasBlacksmithing
    @GrampasBlacksmithingАй бұрын

    They are a little harder I believe because they are for Highway Crossing.

  • @hunt_trap_fish
    @hunt_trap_fish4 күн бұрын

    I'm just getting started on bladesmithing; the first knife I'm making for myself is an old leaf spring. But, I want to make a rr knife for my employee who manages the office on "forge-day" for her to wear as a utility knife when she's riding / working on / working w/ her horses. Is it worth trying to put a handle on one, since there's a chance she's going to be using this in the cold?

  • @nathancole6678
    @nathancole6678Ай бұрын

    Are the braided handles done with chisels?

  • @FornaxusCrucible
    @FornaxusCrucibleАй бұрын

    Hey, do you have a video that exclusively shows how to make each of those twists? That seems like something I'd like to keep permanently handy.

  • @OldHickoryForge

    @OldHickoryForge

    Ай бұрын

    A much older one yes. One of my first videos but I don't think I actually did the reverse twist on that one. But if you google "Blacksmith Reverse twist Square twist Pineapple twist Rock twist Rubix twist" You'll find a million videos on how to make them

  • @FornaxusCrucible

    @FornaxusCrucible

    Ай бұрын

    @@OldHickoryForge Yeah, I've seen a lot of them. I was just hoping there was a one-stop shop that I can just keep ready at-hand. Thanks!

  • @beastatf
    @beastatf10 күн бұрын

    How can I buy one of these ?

  • @theriversexperience9383
    @theriversexperience9383Ай бұрын

    Came here from "Bladesmithing for Beginners" to say, How Dare You?!...

  • @jamysmith7891
    @jamysmith7891Ай бұрын

    Railroads don’t like running people over, Seeing people on the tracks is unnerving to a helpless engineer There’s a lot of abandoned track, particularly old spurs owned by warehouses that converted to truck docks There’s a lot of legit steel to be found if you work on the back side of industry and understand what is a pile of company assets and what is junk in the way

  • @T_B
    @T_BАй бұрын

    Look here man.... don't shoot the messenger! I just got a call from your black tee shirt. He is really getting sick and tired of being stretched over your arms and back. He says it's getting ridiculous how often you swing hammers and keep getting bigger and bigger, even though you have a mechanical hammer available. He asked me to beg you to "CHILL OUT ON HAMMER SWINGS" because he's not quite sure he can hold on much longer. I assured him that I'd pass it along to you, so that's all I'm doing. He cried a lot and at one point I had to talk him off the ledge (of the laundry hamper). So.....bro.... can you chill out a little on the gains? I've been subscribed for years and I kinda find myself siding with the black shirt's complaint - at the rate you're going, you won't need to heat up RR spikes to twist them; you'll just use your bare hands and hopefully not snap the head off of them.

  • @OldHickoryForge

    @OldHickoryForge

    Ай бұрын

    Bah. I have many others to replace him.

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