Well gonna try and 'fashion' a steel out of a horseshoe........sure I read somewhere that it will work.....has the striker part got to be less than 90o? Sure I read that as well any tips? ta
You're going to need carbon steel for a striker. Not sure if horse shoes are.tommy the cat said:Well gonna try and 'fashion' a steel out of a horseshoe........sure I read somewhere that it will work.....has the striker part got to be less than 90o? Sure I read that as well any tips? ta
Most that I've seen, rust enough to be carbon steel, I just don't know if they're hard enough to get sparks from.Snufkin said:You're going to need carbon steel for a striker. Not sure if horse shoes are.
Steve R said:Slight thread hijack.
Anyone have a recomendation of where I can buy a steel and the best one to buy?
Greg said:Would I be able to use the steel from old scaffold clamps as a striker?
I would presume, but I am obviously not sure, that they would be made of a tool grade steel but feel free to correct me if I am wrong of course!![]()
Mike Ameling said:Hmmm ... so hard to tell without having the original manufacturer's spec sheet. My initial thouhts would be no. The carbon content is probably not high enough to make a good flint striker.
The classic way to tell is with the "spark test". You do this with a grinding wheel - like a bench grinder. You press the steel to the grinding wheel, and observe the sparks coming from it. Short white sparkling ones show pretty high carbon content. Long dull red sparks with few sparkles mean little of no carbon content in the steel.
Scrounged steel is fun to work with, but sometimes hard to identify just what type you have. That's why I try to work with some known steels - either new steel or things I have already identified.
I've got about a dozen well made and shaped flint strikers sitting on the shelf right next to my computer. They look great, but when I made them, I picked up a piece of low-carbon steel to start with. So, all the work and the won't spark! Doing this a couple times really teaches you that lesson. Know what you are starting with! Oh, well. They will make a great display - some day. I'll just have to keep them locked away under glass so that nobody tries to use them.
Just my humble thoughts to share.
Mike Ameling