1958 Ford and an oak tree

Jason Fry

Knifemaker / Craftsman / Service Provider
Joined
Jun 5, 2008
Messages
3,160
Back in January of 2014, I joined the American Bladesmith Society. Back in July of 2014, I finally built a gas forge. Back in November, I fired it up at a hammer-in with our local knife club and forged out three blades. This is one of those blades, forged from a portion of leaf spring from a 1958 Ford. There are people out there who will say, "leaf springs ARE such and such steel" based on a chart they found somewhere. I say hogwash on that. This steel IS 1958 Ford leaf spring, and it IS hardened to 59 Rockwell. Without precise testing, spectroscopy, or whatever, that's all I can tell you for certain. While I've not forged maybe 15 blades, it's all grinding in the end. With an eye to the International Custom Cutlery Expo in September, and journeyman smith testing in 2017, I consider this a good practice effort for meeting the guild and JS fit and finish standards. All that said, here are the specs: The knife is 8 3/4 long with a 4 1/8 blade. The blade is 3/16 thick at the ricasso with distal taper. The 600 grit satin finish is clean. The guard is 416 stainless, fit up tight, with a fiber and a 416 spacer. The handle is natural sheoak with an oil finish. Kind of in keeping with the "oak" theme, the right hand sheath is tooled in an oak leaf and acorns pattern. I've done basketweave a whole bunch, but this is my first effort at picture tooling on a sheath.


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Mark side

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back side

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Handle contour and distal taper

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guard fitup and plunge finish

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fancy sheath!
 
Very inpsiring, I have a 1963 ford f100 that I built last year, and during the build I replaced the front main leafs. I have been slowly working on gathering the pieces to build a decent forge to work with and make a couple knives from the steel. Nice work!
 
I'm in awe over the use of the "58" leaf spring. Very cool, and mighty fine job done.
 
Beautiful knife. I was a little disappointed with the title though.

I was expecting a 58 ford pickup with an oak tree and a knife posing somewhere in the pic. Not a knife made from the Ford with an oak tree!
 
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