Well, not much exciting, as I said... All I did was work a bit of wood down to a reasonable thickness for a handle. Shitty soft wood, to match the shitty practice knife.. It will look nice with the wood varnish and stain I've bought though..
Also, just polished up the said practice knife a bit to test the new sandpaper, didn't go as hard as I could have, that will come after the heat treat and such.. Went from like 120 grit, to 600. 120, 2something, 400, and 600 I believe was the progression.. Though, I only spend a minute or two on each, had other stuff to do and this was just killing time.
Before:
http://s27.postimg.org/a92sg78c3/1workbefore.jpgAfter:
http://s27.postimg.org/x45oiuyur/1workafter.jpgAll I did was flip it over for some reason, I worked both sides the same. I imagine had I spent 5X as much time on each grit, it would be pretty fucking shiny.. We will see...
Here is a skinning knife I am making for a friend.. So far its the knife I've been putting the most work into.. I bough all the different sand paper for it, a bunch of stain and varnish for the handle, ect. I even stamped it on the other side with my makers mark, and serial number (01, lol) I made the mark from "hardened" type writer keys, they stamp into hot steel very nicely. Though, I won't show you my mark yet..
http://s27.postimg.org/pqqajwesz/1friend.jpgHere's what I was sanding with for the most part, trying to thin out some soft wood for my practice knife handle. 60 grit sand paper, taped to my counter top.
http://s27.postimg.org/n84lj7t2r/1paper.jpgHere's how thin I made it for now.. This is like 1/4th as thick as each piece was.. It was a plank from a particularly nice pallet I found at work. With stain, and varnish, it should look nice enough.
http://s27.postimg.org/49jmqacxf/1shavedwood.jpghttp://s27.postimg.org/ybjmb2oz7/1wood.jpgAnd here is what I was using to keep my fucking kitchen free of fire hazard wood shavings...
http://s27.postimg.org/n5kpwdpf7/1shopvac.jpgBasically taped the big wide attachment to the edge of my counter, thing is STRONG. Almost all wood dust got sucked down immediately, and I used it to clean up the extra frequently.
And here, is the first 1084 knife I made, for use at work. Fully hardened and tempered. At least a few weeks old, can't be sure exactly. It's been worked hard, cutting everything from boxes, plastic, paracord, whatever, and I have only sharpened it lightly once since then, but here it is, going to work on a piece of generic computer paper..
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HIE7DPtzXX0&list=UU8rvUdhK_CpTmzx7vChdACwHolds a pretty good edge I think.
You cunt's better reply. I am putting in work to make this thread worth a read, you could do the same.