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Who forges with d2?

WestKentucky

Member
Joined
Feb 1, 2014
Messages
13,144
Location
Western Kentucky
I have some d2 (written on billet in sharpie) that I found and I’m trying to figure out what to do with it. I was hoping to use it in my baby lathe but A. My machine can’t handle a piece this size, and B. I’m not skilled enough yet to work with a metal like this. Would this be useful to knife makers? 2.75” by 9” if my memory serves. I found it in the road in front of a machine shop and I know for a fact that they had a truck haul off scrap that day. I’m thinking that this is an end piece too short for them to use for one of their normal products. 73C0CE87-5705-4026-ACD8-32C9620FBAB0.jpeg
 
If you can find someone, maybe cut disks and then forge them into blades.

Or cut it lengthwise in 1/8"-1/4" and make blades, probably easier this way. Definitely a lot less work than the other way.
 
Found this on D2 steel:

 
D2 looks to be a pain to forge. Large billets like that are machined then heat treated to usually the low 50's on the Rockwell scale in industrial manufacturing. I've got a sheet of it (2":x24"x 3/32") waiting for the mood to make a pair of Kitchen knives out of. It might make a nice post anvil but I wouldn't want to try chopping it down with my bandsaw.
 
Right. After awhile one realizes that two major considerations when a knifemaker picks particular steel for a forged custom knife are ease of forging and ease of heat treat.

If you want one of the more exotic steels from a custom knifemaker, it's probably not going to be forged. It will be likely made by stock removal and may be shipped off to a third party for heat treatment.
 
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