Thanks to Jake Smith, Erik Mittag-Leffler, Ashley Wagner, David W. Debora Richards, gspam1, James Straub, Tim Ottawa, Flynn Sharp Knives, David Millington, Joseph Baier, Alex Roy, and Noah for becoming Knife Steel Nerds Patreon supporters! These experiments are very expensive and time consuming so your support is always appreciated.
Which Quenching Oil is Best for Knives?
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YouTube
The following information is also available as a YouTube video for those that prefer watching to reading. The video might be more fun though there are more details and more discussion in the article.
LC200N/Cronidur 30 – History and Properties
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New T-Shirts!
After requests from any kind fans we now have t-shirts available, including an awesome one with the MagnaCut logo on front and knife grinding man on the back. Note it is available in a few different styles and colors. Click this link if you want one.
Bainite Heat Treatments of 52100, O1, and 1095 – How Much Toughness?
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YouTube Video
There is a video version of the following content:
CPM-15V and the Lost CPM-20V – How Much Vanadium Can you Add?
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History of CPM-15V
CPM-15V is essentially a higher vanadium extension of CPM-10V developed by Crucible steel in the late 1970s. I wrote about the history of CPM-10V in this article so I won’t copy-paste all of that here. Prior to powder metallurgy technology it was known that adding higher vanadium would lead to greater wear resistance due to the very high hardness of vanadium carbide. However, once the vanadium content exceeded 4-5% the carbides would be large enough that the steel would fail in forging, and toughness would also be reduced. So the highest wear resistance steel for many years was T15 high speed steel with ~5% vanadium. With CPM-10V they saw what the limit was for vanadium additions and found that once they reached about 11% vanadium the carbide size would be increased because the vanadium carbides would form in the liquid steel before the steel could be gas atomized into powder. Read about the powder metallurgy process in this article. The more vanadium that is added the higher the temperature where the vanadium carbides form. When the formation temperature is higher than the temperature of the liquid steel then they form prior to atomization giving the large carbides in the 11% vanadium PM steel below (labeled CPM 11V):
Edge Retention Testing of Seven More Steels – XHP, SPY27, Maxamet, Rex 45, 420, T15, Rex 76
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Update 1/5/2024: I neglected to mention in the original writeup of this article that the Z-Max was retested along with the new Maxamet and Rex 121 tests. The total cardstock cut was updated from 909 in the original testing to 948 mm.
How to Heat Treat 8670
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Podcasts
I appeared on two podcasts this past week, Knife Perspective and Mark of the Maker. Knife Perspective I had been on before so we mostly focused on MagnaCut and other topics. Mark of the Maker was a full interview asking about my background before discussing my book, website, and CPM MagnaCut. So listen to one or the other or both depending on what you’re in the mood for.
How Even is an EvenHeat? How to Operate Furnaces Effectively
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CPM MagnaCut – The Next Breakthrough in Knife Steel
Thanks to Saptak Dutta, Bill Clancy, Cap Hayes, Electro_Static, Coll Gomila, Kody Ekstrom, Nico, Tom Ewing, Ken Johnson, Brent Stark, Jesse Warren, Malachi Chou-Green, Luke Haag, Bill Harrison, John Geelhoed, and Julian Hamilton for becoming Knife Steel Nerds Patreon supporters!
How to Use a Steel Datasheet to Develop a Heat Treatment
Thanks to David Reem, Colton, camilo, Brendan Gildea, Vince Koacz, Monery Custom Cutlery, Curt E, Shannon Sanders, Brazilian Blades, Rory Kelly, Brunhard, Zachary Chumley, Noel, Adam Nolte, Gundam lupus, and Jan Huch for becoming Knife Steel Nerds Patreon supporters! I still don’t know when it will be time for the announcement of my new steel so until then you can get all of the data on its properties exclusively on Patreon.