Damascus steel made from rasp blades on plasterboard.

The blade is made of drywall blades and powder steel. I don’t know the chemical composition of these blades, but a large diffusion of carbon from the blades into the powder steel occurred. And the blade as a whole received a very high hardness during hardening, it was necessary to temper it at a temperature of 280 degrees Celsius to reduce the hardness to 58 units. In addition, it was not possible to etch the pattern beautifully, since both steels had approximately the same etching rate. Thank you all for your support in the comments. Today is the 844th day of the war. Tea: Yunnan White Buds Pu-erh Tea Raw Puer YABAO Bai Ya Bao Shen Puerh Channel with fragments of teas: @shurapsteas/videos My other channel: On my patreon page, I began to explain the processes and secrets of my work. Topics already covered: 1. Why do I add pepper to container Damascus steel. 2. What do I sprinkle? Flux and its composition. 3. How do I remove the container from the workpiece (container Damascus steel). 4. Why am I drilling a hole in a container. 5. Why do I sweep away the dross from the anvil with my hand. 6. Why do I first forge some blanks on a tree. 7. In what and why do I soak the blank before forging. 8. In which granules do I place the workpiece after forging. 9. What kind of white powder do I pour into the container. 10. In what liquid do I develop the pattern on the blade. Channel Support: My site: Check merch to help support the channel: #DamascusSteel
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