Can You Quench a Knife with DRY ICE??

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  • Опубликовано: 11 янв 2024
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Комментарии • 509

  • @NFTI
    @NFTI  4 месяца назад +58

    I designed this bushcraft utility knife! Would you like to get one? I want to see if people are actually interested in it.

    • @Devva_dharshan
      @Devva_dharshan 4 месяца назад +2

      Yep

    • @MrSuperboxman
      @MrSuperboxman 4 месяца назад

      I'll pick one up, love your craftsmanship and artistic flair.

    • @monhi64
      @monhi64 4 месяца назад

      For sure

    • @cpt_vodka611
      @cpt_vodka611 4 месяца назад

      What’s 2000°F in °c? Everyone else uses °c

    • @demonkingnetsu4045
      @demonkingnetsu4045 4 месяца назад

      1093°C @@cpt_vodka611

  • @davidblalock9945
    @davidblalock9945 4 месяца назад +270

    Here's My suggestion. Use the Aluminum Plates as a heat sync to clamp the knife in, and have the plates be in direct contact with the Dry Ice. This way the Dry Ice can cool the plates well below freezing and aluminum plates will disperse the heat of the blade over a larger area, mitigating much of the localized sublimation of the dry ice.

    • @PJeBenn
      @PJeBenn 4 месяца назад +29

      Good idea, I would take it a step further. Make an ethanol dry ice bath and soak the aluminum plates until they are the same temp as the dry ice, then use the plates for quenching. Alternatively, you could use liquid nitrogen but the dry ice ethanol bath should not boil when you put the aluminum in it. Alternatively, you could use copper plates with even better thermal conductivity than aluminum but they would cost more.

    • @GermanSausagesAreTheWurst
      @GermanSausagesAreTheWurst 4 месяца назад +3

      That's pretty much what I was going to say. Aluminum is a great conductor of heat, but I think the Dry Ice is more of an insulator.

    • @josephgauthier5018
      @josephgauthier5018 4 месяца назад +3

      was gonna suggest the same. would be cool if Nate tries it and it works

    • @takumi2023
      @takumi2023 4 месяца назад +2

      Heat sink* for future reference.

    • @sydneybiscuit
      @sydneybiscuit 4 месяца назад +3

      I'd use plates of copper as a heatsink - I think that would work quite well - especially with the dry ice/ethanol idea
      Good stuff

  • @HangryOne
    @HangryOne 4 месяца назад +95

    I think next step is dry ice on the aluminum plates to cool the blade instead of blasting with cold air.

    • @AWAG_FK
      @AWAG_FK 4 месяца назад +5

      I agree. I put my plates in the freezer before I quench and it works great. The blade needs to be flat though, so you end up grinding the bevels are hard steel. It's how I make most of my knives, but it uses a lot of abrasives.

    • @IIIAnchani
      @IIIAnchani 4 месяца назад +2

      copper plates that were cooled with liquid nitrogen before.

    • @Drrobverjones
      @Drrobverjones 4 месяца назад +1

      Or liquid nitrogen to cool the plates. But yeah. That'd be interesting.

  • @sean..L
    @sean..L 4 месяца назад +23

    I'm so glad to see a "5000 degree knife thru anything" type of video in the year 2024. Its like seeing an old friend.

    • @NFTI
      @NFTI  4 месяца назад +18

      I'd be interested to see a 5000 degree knife, since that's way above the melting point of every knife steel.

    • @sean..L
      @sean..L 4 месяца назад +4

      yeah lol. Those old youtube clickbait videos said stuff like that and got like 80 million views. Just to be clear I'm reminiscing about those old videos not trying to say anything about your high quality stuff. also happy new year :)@@NFTI

    • @jwalster9412
      @jwalster9412 4 месяца назад +3

      ​@@NFTImaybe the knife is an exotic alloy?

  • @PatGilliland
    @PatGilliland 4 месяца назад +56

    Mix your quenching oil with dry ice to get it really cold. 15w30 should freeze up at -55F and there are some specialist oils good to -85F. That should minimize the leidenfrost effect while providing good surface contact.

    • @jwalster9412
      @jwalster9412 4 месяца назад +5

      I wonder what frizen oil looks like.

    • @Kizron_Kizronson
      @Kizron_Kizronson 4 месяца назад

      Lard. Frozen oil looks like lard/butter. It's essentially all the same stuff, with slight differences that change the melting temp. @@jwalster9412

    • @willernst2721
      @willernst2721 4 месяца назад

      This is what I was thinking. Now I am kinda curious if oil will boil like water does if you drop dry ice into it?

    • @Kizron_Kizronson
      @Kizron_Kizronson 4 месяца назад

      Just did a youtube search. People have tried it. Yes, the oil bubbles.@@willernst2721

    • @matstermind
      @matstermind 4 месяца назад

      lol i was just about to comment the same thing, doubt it would work better than just oil, but would be interesting to see the results

  • @IngvarMattsson
    @IngvarMattsson 4 месяца назад +14

    The cooling rate is not only dependent on temperature differential, but also how much energy it takes to heat the material. Water is 4184 J/kgK, steel is around 350 J/kgK, so for every degree the water is heated during the quench, the steel is cooled around 9. The dry ice is around 55 J/kgK, and will (as it goes into gas form) rob almost a full K from the steel. It actually worked better than I expected. Is it worth testing not "press between blocks" but "crush dry ice, and stir a knife around in it" as well? That MAY allow a faster cooling.

  • @davespangler9125
    @davespangler9125 4 месяца назад +28

    Aluminum plates are pretty darn effective at heat transfer. I wonder if it would act as enough of a heat sink to be effective if you were to pre-chill the plates in liquid nitrogen.

    • @lrharner
      @lrharner 4 месяца назад +2

      no need to super cool the plates with air quench steels you have plenty of time to get the blade under 1000f i use Al plates for all of my air quench steels. main benny is keeping the blades from warping. at one point i thouoght about putting a 1/4" copper plate on the face of my 1" thick al plates cause copper can pull the heat out faster. never got around to doing it

  • @johnweems4586
    @johnweems4586 4 месяца назад +18

    You might also try using dry ice to create a makeshift cryo fluid out of something like alcohol, acetone, or anti-freeze(not super healthy) by cooling the liquid down.

    • @MI-wc6nk
      @MI-wc6nk 4 месяца назад

      Exactly what i was thinking, and using flammable liquids doubles the value of the experiment - will the liquid flame at these temperatures? assuming you deal with the vapors of course...

    • @VergilArcanis
      @VergilArcanis 4 месяца назад

      ethylene glycol is better at the heat transfer, but kinda toxic. although propylene glycol might be a good idea. i know they break down rather quickly under high heat, so it may have unwanted side effects. make sure to attempt that in a well-ventilated space for safety reasons

  • @TheSockDemon
    @TheSockDemon 4 месяца назад +7

    Lovely sounds at 1:58

  • @silverspikeprospecting
    @silverspikeprospecting 4 месяца назад +2

    Nice improvised knife ice press!

  • @Roll-Penut
    @Roll-Penut 4 месяца назад +2

    I'm so glad TKOR's spirit lives on in this channel. Rip the goat and thank you nate for keeping his legacy alive

  • @congoballs9725
    @congoballs9725 4 месяца назад +2

    try quenching knifes in all the different oils you can find and buy and test how hard they get to see if one stands out among the rest

  • @Blue-bf8lv
    @Blue-bf8lv 4 месяца назад +1

    this is by far the best attempt at this idea, never seen anyone use 2 blocks of dry ice along side a mount for them to perfectly cool both sides

  • @Kcclips999
    @Kcclips999 4 месяца назад +1

    Always amazing these experiments

  • @oliverhouston6096
    @oliverhouston6096 4 месяца назад +1

    i love nates super good enough setup. like it works but barely and thats all it needs to do.

  • @Blibers
    @Blibers 4 месяца назад +1

    I watched some of his videos a while back and then took a break, and I can say that he has Certainly improved in Quality! Keep it up man!

  • @ZXLMaster
    @ZXLMaster 4 месяца назад +1

    Suggestion: Try freezing a thickness of water onto the dry ice. Sublimation effect should be reduced while maintaining a temperature of near -104 F.

  • @jupiterskiss
    @jupiterskiss 4 месяца назад +10

    Rest in Peace headphone users 😂

    • @TheSockDemon
      @TheSockDemon 4 месяца назад +4

      No truer words have been said

  • @dangingerich2559
    @dangingerich2559 4 месяца назад +4

    Could you imagine using aluminum as cooling plates and LN2 to cool them internally? That might work better than just using dry ice on aluminum plates.

    • @lrharner
      @lrharner 4 месяца назад

      the way i do it is AL plate quench then into the LN dewar after the blades get to room temp. the blades then spend the night in cryo. this way my kiln can come down to room temp slowly with the door closed. its better for the firebrick life. in the morning i ramp the kiln to 400f and pull the blades out of the LN. the kiln stabilizes at 400f about the same time the blades get mostly back to room temp. most steels i temper 400f 2x for 2 hours

  • @asf130thecompany7
    @asf130thecompany7 3 месяца назад +1

    Those sounds made my day :D thanks mate needed it really badly :P

  • @user-tx4ln2yj9o
    @user-tx4ln2yj9o 3 месяца назад

    love your videos

  • @everythingeverett3021
    @everythingeverett3021 4 месяца назад

    i love this guy

  • @JackalopeHerdmaster
    @JackalopeHerdmaster 4 месяца назад +4

    How about a high concentration salt water quench? Not sure how cold salt water can get before it freezes but it's worth a try.

    • @darkmooink69
      @darkmooink69 4 месяца назад

      It’s only a few degrees difference. Sea water freezes at -2C

    • @JackalopeHerdmaster
      @JackalopeHerdmaster 4 месяца назад

      @darkmooink69 Yup. I've done some googling and regular salt water isn't that good. But there's other salts that work way better. Still looking through results for the best salt.

    • @a64738
      @a64738 4 месяца назад

      when you mix salt water and ice you get slurry with freezing temperatures lower then -20c, people used it to make ice cream before freezers. (the ice and the salt reacts creating freezing temperatures).

  • @matthewlarkin2422
    @matthewlarkin2422 4 месяца назад +1

    I've always wanted to take a couple large copper plates and dunk them in liquid Nitrogen and use those as quench plates. Like maybe a bath for the bottom plate and a reservoir on the top plate, that way the plates keep staying cold

  • @justicegusting2476
    @justicegusting2476 4 месяца назад

    Not even the badass music could save your 7th grade science experiment.

  • @TheAnthonybellomo
    @TheAnthonybellomo 4 месяца назад

    Cool video, exactly the interesting topic i subscribed for

  • @gavinbraid242
    @gavinbraid242 4 месяца назад

    Nice dry ice vice Nate. 👍

  • @AdamTehranchiYT
    @AdamTehranchiYT 2 месяца назад

    Huh, neat!
    Perhaps the next iteration would be like a grinding wheel but dry ice?

  • @_BlackSpectrum
    @_BlackSpectrum 4 месяца назад +1

    Nice, Can you try quenching it in ethanol?

  • @MrMartinSchou
    @MrMartinSchou 4 месяца назад

    You could also use a bath of dry ice and acetone. Acetone has a freezing point of -94 °C, which is lower than dry ice's sublimation point of -79 °C.

  • @itarry4
    @itarry4 4 месяца назад

    Bladesmiths that are worried about a blade bending when cooled already used huge rectangular slabs of aluminium to do the quench.

  • @jaeric
    @jaeric 4 месяца назад +1

    So if the problem is that when the dry ice sublimates and creates a pocket where the knife no longer has physical contact, then maybe you could use the dry ice to cool your aluminum plates before and during the quench. That way you get the benefits of the aluminum's thermal conductivity and the low temperature of the dry ice.

  • @graymorality
    @graymorality 4 месяца назад +2

    This was a really well done experiment with the concept. My question is, can a metal be reheated and cooled again to harden it more or would that not work?

    • @Ejerman
      @Ejerman 4 месяца назад

      You can to a certain extent. Essentially heating up the steel causes the microscopic grain structure to expand, when it is rapidly cooled (or even slowly cooled for that matter) the grains shrink down and a microscopic crystalline structure of the steel is formed. There are different formations of carbon and iron in the steel, austenite and martensite that are made through the process of quenching. Martensite in particular is what gives it the hardness, wear resistance and strength. Reheating it would effectively cause the grains to grow again, removing the crystalline structure, but you could quench it again.
      I learned a lot of this from a couple material science classes I've had to take for my degree. If you watch shows like "forged in fire" where they make knives, they make this info easily digestible in the case of knife making, not necessarily metal-working as a whole.

    • @justincoleman9776
      @justincoleman9776 4 месяца назад

      Annealing

  • @sixshotsniper3095
    @sixshotsniper3095 4 месяца назад

    Nate, you don't need something very cold. You need something with very high thermal diffusivity that can be applied with consistent pressure. These microstructural transformations happen in seconds. After the first ~10-15 seconds or so of cooling even in air, the hardness of the blade is set and further cooling won't really change it.
    Realistically, water is hard to beat for this. A fluid definitely can't be beat by a solid at cooling. No matter what fluid you use, you will want high flow and/or turbulence (but low air/bubble content) to mitigate the leidenfrost effect as much as possible.

  • @EmmKamp
    @EmmKamp 4 месяца назад

    Hey Nate,Its so great to see you keeping up the legacy,What an amazing experiment,Would the result change if you shredded the dry ice into thin dust and then clenched in the blade in that? (kind of like dry ice snow) much love from greece!

  • @JD-128
    @JD-128 4 месяца назад

    Could you try something like powderizing the dry ice, putting it in a tall glass, and stabbing the hot knife into it? I feel like that might work better than using solid blocks.

  • @WarkWarbly
    @WarkWarbly 4 месяца назад

    I dub your contraption:
    The Icy Squash Plate
    😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

  • @jtfen86
    @jtfen86 4 месяца назад +4

    Can you quench a knife in a vacuum chamber? Just the knife and vacuum, no liquids.

    • @cryptotech3463
      @cryptotech3463 4 месяца назад +4

      Blacksmith here, that will actually do the opposite. It will slow the cooling down because there’s nothing for the heat to transfer to. So it will be softer than any other quench

    • @ErtsenPlayGames
      @ErtsenPlayGames 4 месяца назад +1

      So you just want him to put the blade in thermos 😂

    • @AshManTV92
      @AshManTV92 4 месяца назад

      I am intrigued as to what that knife would be like, and how long it would take to cool.

    • @Zanroff
      @Zanroff 4 месяца назад +1

      @@cryptotech3463 What about in a pressure chamber?

    • @ErtsenPlayGames
      @ErtsenPlayGames 4 месяца назад

      @@Zanroff more air = more heat transfer etc

  • @gabrielangel1923
    @gabrielangel1923 4 месяца назад +1

    try blending up the dry ice till its like fine sand. then move the blade around in it. it would act more like a liquid then. maybe try a super cooled oil too. or even anti-freeze cooled till it becomes thick.

  • @JakeFromYoutube
    @JakeFromYoutube 4 месяца назад

    2:31 my right ear will never forgive you 😂

  • @justanotherfreakinchannel9069
    @justanotherfreakinchannel9069 4 месяца назад

    Make a dry ice and acetone bath and quench in that. The acetone will remain liquid at dry ice temp, and I think it will give you the super fast quench you're looking for.

  • @solid2713
    @solid2713 4 месяца назад +3

    how about powdered dry ice for quenching and mix powdered dry ice with oil

  • @Malidictus
    @Malidictus 4 месяца назад

    Water is a surprisingly good heat sink. It might not be as cold as dry ice or liquid nitrogen, but it doesn't need to be. Even at room temperature, it can still sink a lot of the heat off of a piece of metal - which is itself a pretty good heat conductor.

  • @LordRae
    @LordRae 4 месяца назад

    Since some metals react better quenched in oil could you freeze some oil or lard into a similar block? Might be interesting combining the cold with traditional quench.

  • @mike123abc
    @mike123abc 4 месяца назад

    Fire extinguisher service centers usually sell dry ice if you cannot get at the grocery store.

  • @southaussiegarbo2054
    @southaussiegarbo2054 4 месяца назад

    Dry ice is also often sold in special effects stores.

  • @Naruto_Uzumaki06
    @Naruto_Uzumaki06 4 месяца назад

    What a legend

  • @VPCh.
    @VPCh. 4 месяца назад

    Quenching in cooled -100C ethanol might work, just make sure to do it in an inert atmosphere so it doesn't catch fire.

  • @taurusranger
    @taurusranger 4 месяца назад

    My new years resolution is to actually click the like button on videos I like, I did on this one. Keep it up from an OG KOR subscriber!!!

  • @krossF
    @krossF 4 месяца назад

    I'd recommend making the dry ice contraption with spring loaded spikes that pull down, instead of a static setup like that. Great video

  • @chaosopher23
    @chaosopher23 4 месяца назад

    Oil is also a good case hardening substance. Getting carbon into the steel improves hardness, which oil and leather dust do quite well. Oil doesn't stink as bad, though.

  • @chezpoof_
    @chezpoof_ 4 месяца назад

    If you need dry ice, go to your local welding supply store. Co2 is sold in dry ice form because it allows for large quantities of densely packed gas to be transported with ease. Co2 is mixed with argon and used as a shielding gas for MIG and TIG welding torches to prevent the surface of metals like steel from oxidizing quickly due to the extreme heats that the metal is subjected to.

  • @esra_erimez
    @esra_erimez 4 месяца назад

    Happy and Healthy New Year to Nate and all the Nate from the Internet viewers! Who's watching in 2024?

  • @Antifag1977
    @Antifag1977 3 месяца назад

    Perhaps if the dry ice was cut or ground into the smallest possible pieces or even powdered the effect would be better. IDK if dry ice can even be pulverized and remain dry ice but if it can then I'd try quenching it in a bucket of dry ice powder.

  • @bearindawoods6399
    @bearindawoods6399 4 месяца назад

    If you use granular dry ice and acetone, you would have a slurry of super cooled liquid. The only issue would be if the acetone would ignite when being touched with the hot metal.
    The liquid would be more efficient at carrying the heat away.

  • @doktahsatan
    @doktahsatan 4 месяца назад +1

    It's clearly an ice vice

  • @BTS_FANGIRL_4Eva
    @BTS_FANGIRL_4Eva 4 месяца назад

    Dry Ice holder is a decent name for your device that holds Dry Ice.
    Thanks for sharing awesome content that is fun enjoyable and entertaining to watch.

  • @LuckyStone888
    @LuckyStone888 3 месяца назад

    My notifications from RUclips changed so I missed a few videos from NFTI, so I'm binge watching a few episodes.

  • @DrummerDT-qx2tn
    @DrummerDT-qx2tn 4 месяца назад

    Nates about to be getting a discount for dry ice at his local dry ice store.

  • @TommyAlanRaines
    @TommyAlanRaines 4 месяца назад

    The quenching sound, sounded like screaming slugs from from Flushed Away lol

  • @mikeboyce21
    @mikeboyce21 4 месяца назад

    I don't know if it was just for the video. But putting plates on the inside.. aluminum preferably. Then dry ice.. letting the aluminum plates come down to dry ice temp. Then squeezing them together while blowing compressed air. Thats the most effective way i can think of to cool down something fast.

  • @TheKittenIsHereForRevenge
    @TheKittenIsHereForRevenge 4 месяца назад

    Respect to the People who watched this all with Headphones on

  • @dbomber69
    @dbomber69 4 месяца назад

    In the North East you can get dry ice from welding supply stores. And instead of using blocks of dry ice find a media blasting company that uses dry ice to strip rust and paint. They blast small dry ice pellets at the material to be stripped. So you could heat up the knife and then use the media blaster to cool it. That should cool the knife but more importantly the dry ice blasting at the knife will blow away any Leidenfrost effect around the knife.

  • @jakemonroe4296
    @jakemonroe4296 4 месяца назад

    Aluminum plates with a heat sink style backside. Then get your hands on powdered dry ice. Where I am in Michigan we have a facility an hour away that I used to pickup from for work that you could get blocks, plates, chunks, and powdered dry ice from.

  • @alexanderpinney
    @alexanderpinney 4 месяца назад +1

    When using a hardness tester you get the needle as close to vertical as you can in one smooth motion, then rotate the dial to match the needle. Tapping on the adjustment knob might apply too much preload force on the piece. How it works is it has a standard preload force, it applies a test force, then it measures the difference between the initial indent at the preload force and how deep the test load force indented. It might not be a huge difference, but would be more consistent.

    • @calebcleaver3414
      @calebcleaver3414 4 месяца назад

      He didn’t grind the thick decarb off of his blade. He also didn’t use foil or anti scale to prevent the decarb from happening in the first place. It’s likely 61-63hrc in the core depending of the stainless alloy

  • @Sirtigereg
    @Sirtigereg 4 месяца назад

    Make it scream dude, very, very hight pressure, ❤awesome video.

  • @The_Keeper
    @The_Keeper 4 месяца назад

    4:45
    If you live a place where dry ice is unavailable, you can (kinda) make your own.
    You need to empty a C02 extinguisher into a container of some sort, and then compress the C02 snow that come out of it as much as you can.
    It isn't perfect, end its expensive as heck, but it'll work in a pinch.
    It can also cool down a case of your beverage of choice to fridge temps in about 5 minutes.
    Also, you can probably order it online.

  • @PaulSkeptic
    @PaulSkeptic 4 месяца назад

    With quenching the _speed_ of temperature change is what matters and the sweet spot speed for some notion of optimal hardness seems to be provided by the quenching oil (who would've thought?).
    However after quenching and getting it to room temp the speed with which you can _continue_ to quench becomes so slow that you can do it e.g. by simply putting the piece in the freezer (see so called ice hardened steel).
    So it would be an interesting experiment to quench as usual (with quenching oil) and then harden it further with freezer, dry ice, liquid nitrogen, etc., and see how hard (and brittle) does it get, however I think it is a situation of diminishing returns.

  • @donaldj.jackson4319
    @donaldj.jackson4319 4 месяца назад

    Dry ice vice sounds good.

  • @matts9371
    @matts9371 4 месяца назад

    Try using heat transfer fluid for quenching. It should remove the heat quite fast. Hopefully, it's not too fast and breaks the blade

  • @_BlackSpectrum
    @_BlackSpectrum 4 месяца назад +1

    How about a mixture of graphene particles in oil? Try quenching in that, the graphene will help in heat transfer and oil won't vapourise as easily!
    And ofcourse the oil is cooled to it's minimum before it's too viscous to use!

  • @timcarter1164
    @timcarter1164 4 месяца назад

    It works with modern quarters but not as well as it does with actual silver quarters 1964 and earlier. But if you push the quarter into the ice long enough that it forms a Groove and stands up, the quarter will begin to vibrate and sing. It's a really cool effect. Doesn't do anything else, but it looks and sounds cool.

  • @vBrokiv
    @vBrokiv 4 месяца назад

    Acetone is commonly used for dry ice baths in the labs. Could give that a shot.

  • @mostlysane77
    @mostlysane77 4 месяца назад

    Put a few long price of dry ice in a quenching oil setup. The oil should become almost solid or super think, then quench and move it around like normal.

  • @jerotoro2021
    @jerotoro2021 4 месяца назад

    Hey idea for you, I've always wondered, if you could seal the surface of a piece of aerogel in a vacuum chamber, if it would hold the vacuum inside without collapsing. And if it was a large enough piece, could you make a lighter-than-air solid?

  • @XaviusNight
    @XaviusNight 4 месяца назад

    I'd recommend trying a conformed aluminum plate set with dry ice to draw the heat away; alternatively, a cheaper option could be to make a 'bath' of Dry Ice pellets and small chunks, so that the ice falls in towards the knife as it sublimates.

  • @shannoncharlton46
    @shannoncharlton46 4 месяца назад

    if you want to get it cooled quickly put dry ice water and salt in a bucket and when you put the knife in move it around really quickly

  • @baksban74
    @baksban74 4 месяца назад

    I thought you'd use powder instead of blocks, surface area, coverage and all that. This was slapstick comedy of a quench xD

  • @stonersguidetogames
    @stonersguidetogames 4 месяца назад

    Hay nate try cooling aluminium with dry ice and using that for the quench, Aluminium quenching is offen used with high warp risk so why not try that but super cold

  • @kenjinks5465
    @kenjinks5465 4 месяца назад

    Cool the aluminum.

  • @TheNewBronyGames
    @TheNewBronyGames 4 месяца назад

    2:45 Its like a vise, since it uses pressure to keep something in place, and its designed for dry ice. Its the Ice-Vise!

  • @dhrekkin9055
    @dhrekkin9055 4 месяца назад

    I remember seeing something (I believe on MythBusters) years ago where they tried hardening with used motor oil and I've always wondered how well that would work with a knife/blade. Perhaps you could combine this by getting extremely *cold* used motor oil or have a quenching tub that rapidly cycles the fluid through it for faster thermal transfer?

  • @n3wwn
    @n3wwn 4 месяца назад

    How about if you super-cool the quenching oil with liquid nitrogen, liquid oxygen or dry ice and THEN quench the knife in the oil? Perhaps keep the temp of the oil down during the quench by keeping the cold substance applied the whole time.

  • @piotrlenar5652
    @piotrlenar5652 4 месяца назад

    Try tu use cold oil vs room temperature. You also my try experiment with a copper sandwich as a razors blades are processed like this. Copper sandwich would transfer heat more effectively when quenched and it help with knife buckling.

  • @ZPapaGeek
    @ZPapaGeek 4 месяца назад

    Have you tried a mixture of crushed dry ice and acetone? Or another less flammable liquid that won't freeze. Outside with a fire extinguisher of course.

  • @protocol6
    @protocol6 4 месяца назад

    Maybe circulate low temp oil through dry ice and quench in the supercooled oil?

  • @oliversmith1981
    @oliversmith1981 4 месяца назад

    ill be surprised if anyone has ever tried this before but im excited to see the results.

  • @7-ten
    @7-ten 4 месяца назад

    👑
    Nate

  • @ss8512
    @ss8512 4 месяца назад

    I like how you have that expensive looking strength gauge thats supposed to be super accurate yet you still tap on it like the machine needle is off lol.

  • @Joe-wk9ow
    @Joe-wk9ow 4 месяца назад

    you could try to build a metal plate to put in-between the dry ice and the knife and see if that works.

  • @zutai1
    @zutai1 4 месяца назад

    cryovice :P
    nitrogen cooled dry ice, as part of the quench. so you have liquid nitrogen, with plates of dry ice, get them down to temp, and in a cryovice. when you add the knife, it will liquid quench, while also having the press of the dry ice to keep it straight, and keep the lidenfrost from forming as much.

  • @laserfloyd
    @laserfloyd 4 месяца назад

    Maybe create that dry ice/IPA mix where... wait, actually, nope. IPA will burst into flames. Do it behind a shield? 😂

  • @Erivel
    @Erivel 4 месяца назад

    you may want to try a dry ice bath so that the heat exchange is permanant and faster using a liquid interface

  • @vaulter2k18
    @vaulter2k18 4 месяца назад

    Hey Nate, what about trying a bucket of propylene glycol that’s been cooled down with a block of dry ice to just above its freezing point. Then remove the dry ice so the co2 bubbles don’t interfere when the knife is submerged.

  • @PJPEE
    @PJPEE 4 месяца назад

    You could try just slicing back and forth into the dry ice, only hardening the cutting edge

  • @epicthief
    @epicthief 4 месяца назад

    Just here for the big blocks of dry ice

  • @justinbanks2380
    @justinbanks2380 4 месяца назад

    As liquid transfers heat faster than air (what the dry ice sublimates to), perhaps if you found a liquid with a high freeing point and dropped dry ice into it to cool it down, you could get better than normal oil quenching? Idk, just guessing

  • @justinlawlor3898
    @justinlawlor3898 4 месяца назад

    The best way to get the metal harder is to get liquid water 50 degrees below zero but also liquid with an antifreeze and the blade should be close to molten

  • @Teku66
    @Teku66 4 месяца назад

    I think a cool video for Nate to do is to make feasible yet completely impractical knives, and test them

  • @ChuckNorris100000
    @ChuckNorris100000 Месяц назад

    Nate how would you do titanium/steel Damascus? You should do a video.