I was afraid of that. From what I've gleaned from reading up on the subject it's either a very low quality piece or suffering from water damage and freezing.Time to pick up another rock.
I was afraid of that. From what I've gleaned from reading up on the subject it's either a very low quality piece or suffering from water damage and freezing.Time to pick up another rock.
Great experiment and thanks for posting your results. Still trying to "bop" them off. Will Lord's video of his gunflint production makes me drool excessively so I practice my knapping before studying it.
Try using some water soluble oil mix not water aloneSo, using a wet saw works…sort of. For this experiment I selected a nice flat, waxy piece of chert that made the geologist pick ring. it was really hard.View attachment 246600This was the first tile saw I ever bought. It’s probably 25 years old, and I’m glad I didn’t use my good one. Chert ain’t tile. Even with the pump runnin’ it was throwing showers of sparks and the rock, blade and motor all got hot (never seen that). View attachment 246601I cut two spalls before there was nothing left on the wheel. It’s just a smooth wheel now with no diamond dust on it anymore. It was probably an old wheel that had done a half dozen bathrooms and maybe a kitchen, but it still had life in it, and now it doesn’t. View attachment 246603 Out of that I got five flints of exceptional hardness. The one on the right is a bought English one For scale. They throw a massive shower of sparks. I’m sure there is also a commensurate amount of wear on the frizzen, but mine is a kit gun and I can always get a new frizzen.
In short, this was not a bad idea, but it’s not going to work with a standard tile saw wheel. The chert is simply too hard. I would guess you’ll get two or three spalls out of a wheel, and that sort of takes the shine off this idea. If you could find a wheel that would keep cutting you could probably get two dozen flints out of that one rock, which would be amazing, but I’ll bet a diamond blade that will cut flints and cherts would be prohibitively expensive, and even if you got some cheap Chinese wheels I’ll bet you would have to change them out every, or every other, spall. So 5 flints cost me a cutting wheel. No biggie, but I’m not doing it again.
I agree and don’t think it would harm anything on the machine, but I would still bet if you use anything other than water the warranty will get harmed. Not that I ever read the instructions…I don't see how water and water soluble oil can harm any think from a warranty standpoint . But it should help with the sparks and lube the blade and keep it cooler
Awesome! Start a thread! Let’s see some pics! I have a few. They’re not fancy. My buddy makes them for the marsh, not the bookshelf. That said, the plastic ones are easier to carry to the blind.When I carve decoys I use a Kevlar glove on my left hand to hold the piece I'm carving. It does eliminate cuts which can be serious with the razor sharp knives we use. Maybe this would help the knappers.
I would but they kind of don't fit into the muzzleloading theme. I started carving in the 80s because those light plastic ones would lose their paint every year and sink when shot. They also bobbed around in an unlifelike manner.Awesome! Start a thread! Let’s see some pics! I have a few. They’re not fancy. My buddy makes them for the marsh, not the bookshelf. That said, the plastic ones are easier to carry to the blind.
I make my own and use heat treated Keokuk chert from Oklahoma and Novaculite from Arkansas. I don't make blades from cores for my gun flints as they always have a ridge but rather use flakes from spawl debatage ( left overs) that are flat with no ridge to work or grind off.I was told heat treated chert would not be good but always questioning what I read or hear I tried it anyway and found it to work very well anyway. Better in fact than what I was buying from TOTW.Seems like flints are out of stock or backordered almost everywhere. Does anyone knap/make their own? There is a ton of chert where I live. Almost every stream bed is full of it. It is a is sedimentary cryptocrystalline rock just like flint. The vast majority of stone age points and tools found on the Ozark Plateau are pressure flaked almost exactly like flint points, and when I was a Boyscout as a kid chert is what we made stone tools from. I'm wondering if chert will spark a frizzen like flint, or if maybe flint is harder since it forms in nodules? I would have no idea where to go looking for flint, but I think I might recognize it if I found some. Or, I might mistake it for chert.
Has anyone else noticed there aren't many flints for sale? I bought some on Ebay, which I'm not overly fond of...
I make my own and use heat treated Keokuk chert from Oklahoma and Novaculite from Arkansas. I don't make blades from cores for my gun flints as they always have a ridge but rather use flakes from spawl debatage ( left overs) that are flat with no ridge to work or grind off.I was told heat treated chert would not be good but always questioning what I read or hear I tried it anyway and found it to work very well anyway. Better in fact than what I was buying from TOTW.
The Novaculite sparks really well but it is more brittle than the keokuk which sparks just as well in my guns. All three of my flint guns use the 3/4 x 7/8s flint size.
Enter your email address to join: