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#1 |
Member
Join Date: Jun 2023
Posts: 52
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Hello:
Would appreciate any comments on this piece in my collection. I wonder if it started out as a pipe tomahawk, bowl was removed and spike welding on. Vargo's Book "The Spike Tomahawk" shows a nearly similar example on p. 76, found in NY. My piece is 8 inches (head) and weights 15 oz. Hand forged and spike is blunted. I made the haft. Thank you |
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#2 |
Member
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Germany, Dortmund
Posts: 9,164
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I hope you haven't paid any money for it!
![]() It's an abomination made by a layman who started electro welding! |
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#3 |
Member
Join Date: Jun 2023
Posts: 52
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I assume that you have reviewed Jack Vargo's book "The Spike Tomahawk" to elicit such an austere comment?
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#4 |
EAAF Staff
Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: Upstate New York, USA
Posts: 932
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Here is a very good axe identification website.
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#5 |
Member
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Germany, Dortmund
Posts: 9,164
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Gentlemen, please look what we have here, it's an unprofessional electro welded monstrum, sorry!!
Look at the pic and the marked pearls from elektro welding. ![]() |
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#6 |
Member
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Germany, Dortmund
Posts: 9,164
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And here it's made longer, also with electro welding.
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#7 | |
Member
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Germany, Dortmund
Posts: 9,164
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![]() Quote:
I don't need to have read books to judge what I see in your pictures as it is more than obvious that the piece is welded together. I am a mechanical engineer and did a lot of welding in my younger years, the beads/pearls I marked are only created by modern electro welding. The second mark is also more than obvious. I don't know that modern electro welding was already common at the time where you think the piece was created. ![]() Everybody who has only a little bit understanding about forging and welding will see directly that this axe head is a unprofessional modified modern axe head, sorry. Regards, Detlef Last edited by Sajen; 7th May 2024 at 01:33 PM. |
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#8 |
Member
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Germany, Dortmund
Posts: 9,164
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See here what I am speaking of, it's the same what we see in my pic in post #5.
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#9 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2019
Location: Eastern Sierra
Posts: 490
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Detlef the first weld from #8 is beautiful. I strive to make those beautiful swirls on my welds. And yes, by all visible signs the OP is stick welded. My main question has been what did the socket start life as? Maybe a small mattock? That would naturally have a lug to weld the blade to, but it seems reshaping an ax blade on a mattock would be easier than the welding process. so maybe some sort of pipe?
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