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#11 | |
Member
Join Date: May 2006
Location: Magenta, Northern Italy
Posts: 123
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![]() Quote:
high carbon content (2,8%-3,8%). I wonder if the burning of graphite in these experiments can be connected with transferring some carbon to steel or simply because it achieve the needed temperature in a faster way or it can hold such temperature longer (only supposing about these two last properties of graphite). Japanese smiths transfer carbon to the blade using vegetal fiber wrapping in certain stages of the smithing. Might be that putting steel into a burning graphite bed is intended to the same aim to compensate the carbon loss during the smithing ? Are wootz/crucible steel blades folded many times as the japanese ones, meaning a loss of carbon in the process and so needing a trick to maintain high the carbon content ? |
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