Knifemaker Restore An Italian Chef’s Knife Worth 1€

Install Raid for Free ✅ IOS: ✅ ANDROID: Start with💰50K silver and get a Free Epic Champion 💥 on day 7 of “New Player Rewards” program I always love to mess around with old knives I find at flea markets.. I found this in a “All 1€“ bucket. Is there anything better than “All 1€“ buckets by the way?! The thing I love the most is that these old blades have so much charater and odd features.. Take this one! The steel is so old you can see many impurities after the etch, just like in damascus steel! And it has been differentially heat treated, meaning that the edge is super hard (between 55 and 60 Rhc) while the spine is still very soft thanks to the edge quench it must have been used for this blade back when it was heat treated. Furthermore, having to deal with so many materials limitations really makes each project of this kind unique in some way or another, and I like that a lot! In this case I decided to go for a double brass bolster, inspired by old folding knives, and the separation between brass and wood is done at a 45° angle for extra fanciness! Jokes aside, I wanted to try this as a technique challenge. I don’t really have precision tools or machine to make this fit reliably, so I wanted to try doing it all by eye with just the belt grinder and a “v“ block as 45° reference. I have to admit I am surprised by the fit! It’s not 100% perfect but pretty damn close. Better than I expected anyway! And thanks to the brass pin in the bolster and the angle between those the wood in between is held in place just by one singe pin, no glue at all! That’s something you probably don’t want to see in a chef’s knife as water can infiltrate, but I’ll keep this one for me and I’m happy to have it all fit without glue just for the fun of it. I just started to list some of the stuff I use for my projects in this amazon storefront: It’s affiliate marketing, so if you order something from here you’ll help the channel for free! Thank you! Here are some of the videos where I go in more details about tecniques and tools used in this video: Stabilizing wood: Vacuum pump and chamber used to stabilize: Homemade mosaic pins: Tempering oven: My lovely drill press: My lovely buffer: Index of operation and materials: 0:50 Electrolysis: water and sodium carbonate solution, parts connected to negative side and steel sacrificial anodes to positive sice of a DC power supply (car battery charger). 2-3 hrs at 5amp. 3:44 Refine shape and grinding new bevels on 2x72 belt grinder, edge kept cool with water bucket 4:43 Hand sand to 600grit sandpaper 5:09 Etch in ferric chloride 5:30 Satin finish with fine steel whool 6:01 Check moisture content before stabilizing, see video above for more info 6:59 Pull vacuum! Again, see the dedicated video for more info 7:52 Stabilizing resin cure 8:12 Mosaic pins, detailed video linked above 9:55 Center punch rivet holes 10:25 Reclaimed brass flat stock to use as bolster cut on the metal cutting band saw 10:50 Drill rivet holes with ca glue used instead of clamps 11:50 Mark excess material to grind off 12:20 Grind the 45° bevel with a v block as support 12:52 Step for the rivet to fill 13:17 Rivet the bolsters with brass round stock and ball peen hammer 13:56 Center hole for the mosaic pin 14:10 Cut wood inserts to rough size 14:24 Grind matching 45° bevels 14:51 Match drill pin hole 15:40 Hand sand up to 1200 grit 16:08 Buff with fine polishing compound 16:35 Boiled linseed oil as finish 16:45 Sharpen with MadEdge sharpener 17:06 Strop on leather with fine polishing coumpound Thanks a lot for watching, I hope you liked the video! Suggestions and comments are welcome. Leave a like and share to anyone who might be interested! ★Patreon★ ★Website★ ★Follow me★ Facebook ► Twitter ► Instagram ►
Back to Top