Originally posted by TxMoon:
This is start to finish in short. cut out the blade from the saw mill blade using a angle grinder, then with a belt sander grind it down to what I want, then oil treat, then HT then sand it down to finish.
You may want to anneal the blade after it's cut out & before you start to grind your profile.
Throw the 'blank' in your forge & bring it up to critical temperature (none magnetic) If you can do this with the doors & windows shut & with the lights off, it'll be a very dull red, not bright orange
Try & hold it at this temperature for 1-2 minutes & then bury the blade in either vermiculite or hot ash or embers & leave it to cool very slowly (4-6 hrs) If you can leave it in the embers of a dying fire & then leave it until the fire has gone out & cooled, you should be about right.
This step will releive all the stresses in the steel & bring it back to being soft.
What
you are doing is essentially re-hardening a tempered blade, which will increase the amount of stress already in the blade, causing cracks
Also, where you have any transition from thick to thin, or wide to narrow, or any notches (such as just in front of the plunge) try & round off all your corners. It doesn't need to be much, but a sharp angle will become a focus point for any stresses & is more likely to crackon that point.
Hope this helps Tx. Stick with it, you're doing really well from what I can see.
It ain't an exact science (well, it is, but we ain't all Poindexters
) & 90% of this is trial & error. Unfortunately you can't have one without the other at some point