Forging a Copper Damascus Cu Mai Knife

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  • Опубликовано: 17 окт 2024
  • This should be interesting!
    In this video I work on an experimental Cu Mai knife.
    I love how the finished product turned out, if a little unexpected.
    Hope you enjoy!
    Link to Aleeknives video here: • Cu Mai by hand - progr...
    Music: Bensound.com

Комментарии • 114

  • @MeleeTiger
    @MeleeTiger Год назад +12

    The real treasures are the friends we consolidated along the way.

    • @PJTForging
      @PJTForging  Год назад +2

      You jest, but I genuinely appreciate your continued support. 🙃

  • @TyrellKnifeworks
    @TyrellKnifeworks Год назад +14

    The knife came out great! Good job, Phil! Couple tips: 1) For etching regular damascus, weaken your ferric mixture to something like 4:1 and do three 6-7 minute baths (instead of one 20 min), sanding with 2000 grit in between. That will give you more defined lines and not "muddy" your damascus as much. 2) Keep your ferric mixture you used with copper separate since the copper will contaminate your ferric, 3) for your ferric mixture for copper, replace 1/3 of it with muriatic acid. That will prevent your copper from bleeding.

    • @PJTForging
      @PJTForging  Год назад +3

      I tried to find the comment where you mentioned this before, but I couldn't find it! Thanks!
      I do keep the copper ferric separate already though. ;)

    • @TyrellKnifeworks
      @TyrellKnifeworks Год назад +4

      @@PJTForging I figured you consolidated all that info. 🤣

    • @PJTForging
      @PJTForging  Год назад +1

      Touché! 😂

  • @robertrussell6324
    @robertrussell6324 10 месяцев назад +2

    Looks awesome. Thanks for taking us along.

  • @tiezeehc
    @tiezeehc Год назад +3

    The consolidating part of this video was my favorite 😂

    • @PJTForging
      @PJTForging  Год назад

      It's a very important step! 😉

  • @scottstrong1989
    @scottstrong1989 Год назад

    Love the knife, and your sense of humor!

  • @larrykoroush6995
    @larrykoroush6995 13 дней назад

    Cu mai knives are beautiful. I am looking to add a second to my collection

  • @HummingbirdKnives
    @HummingbirdKnives Год назад +1

    She's a beauty! Great job and always entertaining!!

  • @TWKKNIVES
    @TWKKNIVES 6 месяцев назад

    I don't know if you have but I certainly hope that you have continued to master that process where you integrate the style of Damascus with the holes in the copper you can tell the difference and I think with some more refinement that could be extremely extremely cool having two patterns of the cover on different sides of the blade

  • @austinstark860
    @austinstark860 Год назад

    I’m only half here for the blacksmithing, more than half for the humor 😂

  • @JamesMPogue
    @JamesMPogue 4 месяца назад

    Absolutely beautiful knife, well done knife maker, enjoyed watching you build it.

  • @flatpicker9
    @flatpicker9 Год назад +1

    Ou mate, I love it so much! Those "fokin' take a long" looks are so funny. But, almost every minute I was sayin' Ou damn!!!! I envy you!

  • @bobgore1962
    @bobgore1962 Год назад +4

    The knife looks amazing!!! Great job, and thanks for sharing! 😎👍🏻🔨🔥🔪

  • @danielschisler949
    @danielschisler949 Год назад +1

    That thing is stupid beautiful!

  • @hankgarcia7572
    @hankgarcia7572 Год назад

    The knife is beautiful, I was a copper worker so anything with copper is fantastic. Great job.

  • @406751
    @406751 Год назад

    WOW!!!!! dude ... such an amazing job, it looks completely awesome!

  • @wetcat833
    @wetcat833 Год назад +1

    Just stumbled on to the first vid that I have seen from you. Very enjoyable. It pays to dare outside the box. First class knife. you have a new subscriber. I'm glad it worked out. I think a stroke of good luck that your first choice of wood, broke. That handle is a perfect contrast. You did have me biting my nails when you were worrying about the air gaps in the drill holes. A bit extra work but extra insurance. Copper melts at 1085C. You could melt some copper rod with your oxy into the holes and scratches and then grind it flat on the belt grinder. No air pockets. the extra copper might give an alternative look. Great job, worked without the extra work. Hope to catch up with more of your shows, soon.

  • @qshomeoffice
    @qshomeoffice Год назад +1

    Great work, loving the finished knife! 👍👍🍻🍻

  • @whuop-wadeshumbleopinion625
    @whuop-wadeshumbleopinion625 Год назад +3

    Really awesome build!! Even if it isn’t exactly as you had intended. Great work!

  • @Dorkasaurus_711
    @Dorkasaurus_711 Год назад +1

    I'll comment in a sec, just consolidating my billet... still consolidating my billet. Awesome video, end product looked fantastic. Looking forward to seeing another experiment soon.

    • @PJTForging
      @PJTForging  Год назад

      Thanks Emma! Glad you liked it! :)

  • @xabieraranburu716
    @xabieraranburu716 Год назад

    Really well consolidated

  • @24934637
    @24934637 9 месяцев назад +1

    Did you remember to consolidate the billet? LOL. On a serious note.....Great vid. Thanks for the upload. Stunning end result!

  • @peresknives
    @peresknives Год назад +1

    Great job!

  • @christospapakostas8405
    @christospapakostas8405 10 месяцев назад +2

    All clear....the billet is consolidated! I repeat: the billet is consolidated!

  • @bleeblin5252
    @bleeblin5252 Год назад +2

    Love the thumbnail. Should get you a lot of views. Project looks awesome.

  • @kbye5323
    @kbye5323 Год назад +2

    This is beautiful! Very nice work and love the channel!

  • @dodgeit3014
    @dodgeit3014 Год назад +1

    holy cow man that is beautiful

  • @thespartan2224
    @thespartan2224 Год назад +3

    I don't know.... I didn't see a group hammer consolidation pass, so I'm not sure its really consolidated properly... Was a damn fine looking knife and while some of the more intricate pattern was lost on the rain drop damascus side, it still looks absolutely stunning. Also really neat work on the handle, the lighter wood I reckon worked out better overall.

    • @PJTForging
      @PJTForging  Год назад

      I wasn't 100% sure on the choice of handle wood, so thanks for saying so! :)

    • @thespartan2224
      @thespartan2224 Год назад

      I think it provides a good contrast and pops nicely with the darker shades from the coffee and acid etches and really nicely complements the copper.

  • @KChandler9362
    @KChandler9362 Год назад +1

    Very nice!

  • @Barncat01
    @Barncat01 Год назад +1

    I've seen this on RUclips a few times. Really cool!!! I think I saw Tyrell knife works do one with gold in it. I really don't see how the copper and or gold don't melt getting it up to weld temp and heat treating temp.

    • @PJTForging
      @PJTForging  Год назад

      You're not actually forge welding like you would between two pieces of steel, it's more like the copper layer is brazing the steel together. And the heat treating temp. of steel is lower than the melting point of copper. :)

  • @DesOttsel
    @DesOttsel Год назад +1

    Could you shape the knife by forging it with a hammer instead of grinding/machining it down or would that just be too much of a risk of loosing the copper even if I had a square pipe to shield it from direct heat?
    Also, if I was to make a cleaver, would the easiest way to make the billet wide enough be to make a shorter taller stack so that it gets wider and less long when you compress and draw it out?
    Thanks, love your videos, but I’m still pretty new to smithing. Also, my oil is just vegetable oil since I’ve mainly been working with 1075. Would that work for the quench or would I need a different speed

    • @PJTForging
      @PJTForging  Год назад +1

      Alright, so...
      Once you've brazed the copper and steel layers together, you need to use stock removal rather than forging otherwise you won't get the layers/stripes showing through in the final pattern/blade. If you mean can you forge the profile of the knife, in theory yes, but you're gonna massively risk making the centre piece that will form the hardenable edge of the blade wonky, so I wouldn't recommend trying this.
      Unless you have a big power hammer, or VERY strong press, I wouldn't recommend trying to squish a tall billet down flat. Plus again, you risk loosing symmetry of your layers and might end up with a wonky blade edge.
      Vegetable oil isn't ideal, but I used veggie oil when I was starting out, and it did ok. I have no idea how quenching a cumai billet would react in it though.
      I don't know where you're at with your forging journey, but I would suggest just making some small, sacrificial cumai billets first. Just practice getting them to stick, and how to grind the patterns in, and how they react to the quench before you attempt a knife. Otherwise I fear you may invest a lot of time in a blade for it to fail at one of any number of hurdles, leading to many a tantrum.
      Good luck to you! :)

    • @DesOttsel
      @DesOttsel Год назад

      Thanks so much for the info. That gives me a good starting place.
      Yeah, I was talking about the profile of the knife, but I was guessing I wouldn’t be able to and was actually thinking that same wonky cutting edge might happen. I’ll probably still hammer out the tang to draw it out, but sounds like I’ll be going through some belts haha.
      For right now, I’ll probably start with sandwiching copper and 1075 for the first couple tries that way I’m not wasting Damascus.

  • @sharpestbulb
    @sharpestbulb Год назад +1

    I was half expecting you to open the oven to a charred lump because you left it in for a minute longer than you wanted. I think you've toyed with us so much I'm just paranoid now 😆

    • @PJTForging
      @PJTForging  Год назад

      Don't be frightened. 😏😈

  • @popssevere6492
    @popssevere6492 Год назад +1

    Amazing 👏

  • @farscape3100
    @farscape3100 Год назад +1

    dont knock it
    i have to say that turned out gorgeous

  • @johncannon3593
    @johncannon3593 Год назад

    Doesn’t the copper tarnish pretty quickly in CuMai (on a working blade vs a safe queen that never sees use)?

  • @laurentcavaille2191
    @laurentcavaille2191 Год назад

    Magnifique travail et résultat 👏👏

  • @threecatforge
    @threecatforge Год назад +1

    Cool experiment with an awesome end product l. Would love to see a successful tigers trip pattern it sounds like it would look amazing

  • @ianmclaughlin8987
    @ianmclaughlin8987 Год назад +1

    Would it be possible to do the same technique as this video but using thinner stock metal, also adding an additional four pieces, two metal, two brass. I would think the thinner stock would compensate for the extra four layers. I have tried a brass, copper Cu Mai myself and out of three attempts managed to get one to bond almost 100 percent but still small cracks or pits. I have not seen any Cu Mai using brass and copper so know it is hard or unlikely to succeed. I almost achieved success but realize that I never cleaned the metals thoroughly before welding them into the sandwich. I am hoping to see someone try this that has much better skills then me and produce a nice blade.

    • @PJTForging
      @PJTForging  Год назад +1

      I nearly achieved this exact think when I tried to made a copper and brass cumai axe. Yes it is possible, however if you have a lot of thin layers, you risk losing the straightness of your actual cutting edge, so you'd have to be careful to keep it straight and equal down the length of the blade during the forging process. :)

    • @ianmclaughlin8987
      @ianmclaughlin8987 Год назад

      @@PJTForging Yes, your Cu Mai Axe looking amazing. I will probably try another blade at some point but it more expensive when is fails. Thanks for the advice :)

  • @stufq
    @stufq Год назад +1

    Is a beauty!

  • @CrudeButEfficient
    @CrudeButEfficient Год назад +1

    That's a really good looking blade! I wonder how deep you can make the indentations, and still have them fill out. Would it work if you drilled holes straight through, and squeezed in copper rods? Or would that mess something else up?

    • @PJTForging
      @PJTForging  Год назад +1

      I did consider that as an option, my main concern would be if the blade blank was full of holes, it could significantly warp when it came to the quench. 🤷🏼‍♂️

    • @CrudeButEfficient
      @CrudeButEfficient Год назад

      @@PJTForging Yea, I figured that there was some metallurgic reason. Maybe try it as an experiment on some scrap pieces, just to see what happens?

  • @MeleeTiger
    @MeleeTiger Год назад +1

    This might be a stupid thought... But is it possible to do something like Cu Mai with other metals like silver or gold? 🤔

    • @zarathean8758
      @zarathean8758 Год назад

      from what ive read silver and brass/bronze could also be used (think braizing)

    • @PJTForging
      @PJTForging  Год назад +1

      You can do it with brass, bronze and nickel... I'm not sure about silver and gold... and I'm too poor to find out. 😮‍💨

    • @TyrellKnifeworks
      @TyrellKnifeworks Год назад +1

      Yes, its possible with both silver and gold. I'll be attempting 24k gold soon.

  • @guerrero1972canalla
    @guerrero1972canalla 6 месяцев назад

    Hola a que temperatura haces la forja para que derretir el cobre?

  • @tomasjosefvela1
    @tomasjosefvela1 Год назад

    You should have made a really tiny domino and a tiny domino tool to cut the holes and sold the design to Festool or offered it rather, and if they said no you could just sell it to Vevor before they stole it anyway(to sell on Amazon where they take great strides to make sure copy write and patents are strictly enforced!! NOT!) and then you'd have created a whole new way to fix those damn breaks that happen to just about every knife maker I've watched on RUclips at some point or another but always ALWAYS when there is an unidentified or irreplaceable piece of material they had sitting... no "bouncing (or bumping maybe?) around the shop since forever how long when my grandpa was alive and my daddy was a wee one making weird trades with hitchhikers and farmers at their stands on the side of a road that no longer exists.... idk, i forgot what my point was... but thanks for sharing, you do beautiful work!

  • @cryp2nite947
    @cryp2nite947 Год назад +1

    I wonder if you really consolidated the billet enough :P

    • @PJTForging
      @PJTForging  Год назад

      I lay awake every night wondering the same thing. 🤔

  • @carrestore
    @carrestore Год назад +1

    good job

  • @AP.Custom.Forgeworks
    @AP.Custom.Forgeworks Месяц назад

    Very cool ty

  • @zarathean8758
    @zarathean8758 Год назад

    put a piece of paper in between eaxh layer before welding the billet up should prevent the oxides

  • @willyschannel6594
    @willyschannel6594 Год назад

    How much for that knife..... I want one

  • @philmcglen6194
    @philmcglen6194 Год назад +1

    That is absolutely gorgeous! Really great build. My thing about knives like this though is that it feels like a bit of a waste of the two bars of Damascus in the end. The results are amazing, but there's really not much left of the cladding. Maybe I'm just tight lol

    • @PJTForging
      @PJTForging  Год назад +1

      I get what you mean, cu mai is a pretty wasteful process. But so long as you just look at the end result and not the starting point, it comes out pretty!

  • @feraltweed
    @feraltweed Месяц назад

    I like it

  • @jeffclarke1694
    @jeffclarke1694 Год назад +2

    Hey bro, I heard you liked consolidating. So we Consolidated your consolidating, so you can consolidate while you consolidate.

    • @PJTForging
      @PJTForging  Год назад

      What on earth are you talking about!?
      😉

    • @jeffclarke1694
      @jeffclarke1694 Год назад

      @@PJTForging you never watched xibits 'pimp my ride' kind of a meme lol

    • @PJTForging
      @PJTForging  Год назад

      I just don't understand why you keep using varying forms of the word "consolidate" so much... seems odd. 😂😉

    • @jeffclarke1694
      @jeffclarke1694 Год назад

      @@PJTForgingYOU DID THAT

  • @MarrockV
    @MarrockV Год назад

    Maybe next time you should consolidate the billet.

  • @thomasherrington5521
    @thomasherrington5521 Год назад +1

    I consolidate the advice

    • @PJTForging
      @PJTForging  Год назад

      It's the right thing to do! :)

  • @billwoehl3051
    @billwoehl3051 Год назад

    Although throwing a piece of clothe or paper into the forge with the gas already flowing looks cool on camera, it's not a good idea to open the gas before introducing the flame, Flame first, then open the gas, ALWAYS.

    • @PJTForging
      @PJTForging  Год назад +1

      But it looks cool on camera. 😎👍

  • @faroukchellali965
    @faroukchellali965 Месяц назад

    جميل جدا. شكرا

  • @ssunfish
    @ssunfish Год назад

    9:56 I laughed!!!!

  • @smudger797
    @smudger797 Год назад

    🤠

  • @bramweinreder2346
    @bramweinreder2346 Год назад

    Yo dawg, i heard you like consolidating damascus with a hammer, so I put a hammer in your hammer so you can consolidate while you consolidate!

  • @Macca8228
    @Macca8228 7 месяцев назад

    Did you learn what the word consolidation ment before this video 😂😂

  • @coffeemaniya70
    @coffeemaniya70 Год назад +1

    San Mai.
    san : three, mai : sheet.
    Cu mai : Cu Sheet?????

    • @PJTForging
      @PJTForging  Год назад +1

      "Mai" is used to denote "layer/count/number". So San Mai roughly translates to "number/layer of three".
      Technically speaking, this knife is a Go Mai or "number/layer of five".
      Cu Mai comes from the chemical symbol of copper being "Cu". So "Copper layers". 🙃

    • @coffeemaniya70
      @coffeemaniya70 Год назад

      @@PJTForging Precisely, "Mai" is a unit for counting thin, flimsy objects such as paper and leaves.
      The layer you mentioned is called "Sou" in Japanese.
      So, to express the Cu (Copper) Layer, you should say "Cu Sou".
      Of course, in the narrow sense of "Sanmai", which is one method of knife making, it is also transformed into the meaning of "3 layers".
      Because 3 iron plates means 3 layers of iron plates.
      And since the word "Sanmai" is used as a proper noun in knife making, it should be used as one word.
      If you separate "San" and "Mai", it becomes a word with a different meaning from "Mai" in "Sanmai".
      thank you. 🙂

    • @coffeemaniya70
      @coffeemaniya70 Год назад

      Ignore all of my comments above, it's a word you created yourself, so there should be no problem.😁
      thank you for the good video

  • @paullmight42
    @paullmight42 Год назад

    purty

  • @scrappyddz
    @scrappyddz 7 месяцев назад

    really wasted an opportunity to use copper pins

  • @Palatard
    @Palatard Год назад +1

    w a f t

  • @markpereira1975
    @markpereira1975 Год назад +1

    Dude you say the word consolidate one more time and I'm gonna punch you through the screen!