Helle Viking Fail

  • BushMoot: Come along to the amazing Summer Moot 31st July - 5th August (extended Moot : 27th July - 8th August), a festival of bushcrafting and camping in a beautiful woodland PLEASE CLICK HERE for more information.

trashcanman1984

Full Member
Mar 29, 2016
2,080
1,228
In my wildest dreams...
So, I really like the Helle knives, I have a few, and the Helle Viking is one of my favourite models.

Unfortunately over the Christmas period, on a chestnut roasting task outside, while doing feather sticks the blade broke away from the handle...in disgust I threw the handle in the fire and placed the blade away to safeguard my children....then reached for an abused Mora Classic (that won't die!).

On thinking about it, I thought it would be good to ask if anyone else has had the same issue?

Picture of the remaining blade...

IMG20260111141950.jpg

I have been thinking of welding it to a flat bar of mild steel, but it's likely to go in the metal bin.

Safe to say that I am disappointed, it was not abused, and used for carving only.
 
That is surprising. It's a shame you threw the handle away as it would have been good to see the tang in that. Worth contacting Helle as they may be interested in seeing this regardless of there no longer being a handle.
 
  • Like
Reactions: dwardo and Toddy
Tang failure. Most likely due to a stress fracture/riser from the heat treatment process. When you look at the break from the tang end, is there an area which is a different colour to the 'clean' grain? Normally a straw/yellowish type colour?

Would you be able to provide a pic of the grain too please? Close up as you can get, end on from the break.
 
Tang failure. Most likely due to a stress fracture/riser from the heat treatment process. When you look at the break from the tang end, is there an area which is a different colour to the 'clean' grain? Normally a straw/yellowish type colour?

Would you be able to provide a pic of the grain too please? Close up as you can get, end on from the break.
I'll post a picture tomorrow, thank you
 
  • Like
Reactions: HillBill
OK, from what I can see: rectangular section of the stick tang, the final break happened in the bright area on the left; brittle fracture with a few striations so it did not happen all at once but at least in a few stages.

Then the strange part: something like shear lips on both long sides but at 90 deg angle to the final break, likeliest cause sidewise bending.

Shear lips and brittle fracture can be found at the same piece but seldom at that angle.

The bad news: it does look like there was a crack in the middle for a long time; brownish and greenish area. The problem is that I can't imagine how a crack like that has formed.

Was this a laminated blade? If yes that might be an explanation for some features but still kind of strange.

As a final guess something might have gone very badly at the final heat treatment.
 
OK, from what I can see: rectangular section of the stick tang, the final break happened in the bright area on the left; brittle fracture with a few striations so it did not happen all at once but at least in a few stages.

Then the strange part: something like shear lips on both long sides but at 90 deg angle to the final break, likeliest cause sidewise bending.

Shear lips and brittle fracture can be found at the same piece but seldom at that angle.

The bad news: it does look like there was a crack in the middle for a long time; brownish and greenish area. The problem is that I can't imagine how a crack like that has formed.

Was this a laminated blade? If yes that might be an explanation for some features but still kind of strange.

As a final guess something might have gone very badly at the final heat treatment.
Yes, it is a laminated carbon steel blade. It has not been abused, but in carving there has been sideways pressure, and I used to carve hard woods.
 
  • Like
Reactions: trashcanman1984

BCUK Shop

We have a a number of knives, T-Shirts and other items for sale.

SHOP HERE