I have spent both Monday and Tuesday finishing flattening, drilling, and fitting the handle scales and the brass fittings.
First I have sieved some bone dust that I have collected through a fine nylon mesh (from pantyhose – I do not wear them, but they can be quite useful in the workshop, so I have indeed several in a drawer). I mixed then the bone dust with five-minute epoxy, filled the hollow back of the bones with it and heated it with a heat gun to about 70°C (not so hot you cannot touch it, but hot enough you cannot press your hand against it for a longer time, a hairdryer would suffice too for this particular task) for quicker curing and stronger bond.
After it completely hardened I ground the back flat again and proceeded to drill the holes for pins.
Drilling the holes was relatively uneventful. Double-sided tape was very useful in holding the scale on the tang and the whole assembly on a flat piece of wood for drilling to avoid chipping of the bone on exit. Also, I have used blunted and overheated drill bits to hold the scales in place for a good fit and I did not mess up the job terribly. I did make minor mistakes on the left handle scale, but those should be correctable when fixing everything together.
With the scales drilled and fitted against the bolster, I proceeded to make the brass pommel fittings. That went really well, and everything went smoothly. Too smoothly you might say. I glued the brass fittings in place, peened the pins and ground, and polished them over.
That is where the problems started, and I must say – they are not all my fault.
The first problem was that the round stock I have used for pins apparently has different chemical composition than the flat profile used for fittings. Had I known this, I would not file them flush and I would leave them slightly proud of the surface (“admitted” instead of “hidden”). However, there was no way back once I ground them flush, so I was hoping they will get hidden under the patina.
But the patining did not go well too, in three ways.
The first – I have made a mistake – I have not masked the steel properly. I thought I did, but I just did not. And as one Czech rather rude but astute saying goes – ” myslet znamená hovno vědět” – “to think (assume/mean/guess) means to know shit-all”. So when I was giving the brass a nice hot bath to copper plate it, some of that bath leaked under the masking and copper-plated and etched the blade in some places too.
The second – the different brasses did not take copper plating identically, it was a lot more difficult to copper plate the pins than the rest. It took over an hour to do on the pins what took mere minutes on the rest (which exacerbated the problem with poor masking later on).
The third – when blackening, I have made the solution probably way too concentrated. It has covered the parts in a nice jet-black matt color almost instantly. But that color has completely rubbed off when I washed it with water and brush. I did not realize the true cause of this so I tried it two more times, but it just did not take, especially not on the pins, After the third attempt I thought I am done on the pommel at least, but it flaked off the next day again.
These mistakes are not catastrophic, but they are a major setback. I had to re-polish everything (done), re-etch with ferric chloride (done), give the steel new tannic-acid patina (in progress), and only after that is done to my satisfaction, can I again try to patina the brass.
However, I have to deal somehow with the pins now. They are ground flush already, but since they will not take the patina the same way the rest does, I must leave them visible. And that means probably leaving them polished and not applying patina to them at all. I will do that and then I will decide whether I like it or not. If not, then I will have to drill them out and either replace them or, if I bungle that job (which is very likely) to make completely new fittings. Either way, it is at least one day, and possibly several days, of work before I can progress further.
However, there did come one good thing out of this – I found two new recipes for black that do not require copper-plating the brass first. One requires hot-bath with ammonia (CuSO4+Na2CO3 – precipitates basic copper carbonate which after filtering and washing with water can be dissolved in hot water by adding ammonia), so it is a major stink and not exactly easy or quick. The second one works at room temperature but is rather caustic and dangerous to handle (HCl + potassium polysulfide). I will probably try the second one now, although I do not like very much working with caustic solutions, since my equipment, as you have seen, is not exactly suited for that kind of job.
Jazzlet says
I don’t think the pins being a different colour is a problem even with them ground flush, I like the way they contrast with the pommel.
And I hope you manage the blacking without hurting yourself!
kestrel says
That is aggravating that your patina is not behaving itself. Here is hoping you’ve got it solved now.
I had wondered about the ammonia. I have a formula for making a mordant (used for fixing dyes in wool and other fibers) that is 1 part ammonia to 2 parts water, and then add pieces of copper. The copper turns some amazing colors. I’ve put other metals in there as well. If left in long enough at room temperature the metal eventually turns very dark but that can take months. I was not trying to make the metal turn color, just the fiber, so I did not know if that would work for your metal or not.
Lofty says
That’s the trouble with cheating on fast patina, the proper way is to spend a hundred years using the knife in a castle dungeon cooking for the Horror Upstairs.
Marcus Ranum says
I’d just say that I intended the pins to be a different color. How would anyone know differently?
Giliell says
Yeah, what Marcus said. Claim that’s what you wanted to do all along.
Now, I understand not wanting to wear those thin plastic pantyhoses, but I really recommend thick woollen ones for winter. Mr once borrowed a pair of mine and he was absolutely furious about how he’d been wearing long johns as a man is supposed to do instead of tights for much of his life when tights are so much warmer and more comfy.
Charly says
The problem is, of course, that I know I was aiming for something different, not that anyone would notice.
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@Giliell, I have tried thick woolen tights in winter, but it must be really, really freezing for me to be able to endure them. I hate tight clothing or jewelry, it does not feel comfortable at all. Warm? Yes. Comfortable? No. It is very subjective.