Ralph said:I have recently bought an SWC bushcraft knife (beautiful kinfe) but I am terrified of staining or discolouring it. I have been cleaning it mainly with saliva or meths, but is there any way I should be cleaning it? And if so what with?
Ralph said:I have recently bought an SWC bushcraft knife (beautiful kinfe) but I am terrified of staining or discolouring it. I have been cleaning it mainly with saliva or meths, but is there any way I should be cleaning it? And if so what with?
Ralph said:I have recently bought an SWC bushcraft knife (beautiful kinfe) but I am terrified of staining or discolouring it. I have been cleaning it mainly with saliva or meths, but is there any way I should be cleaning it? And if so what with?
Ralph said:I have recently bought an SWC bushcraft knife (beautiful kinfe) but I am terrified of staining or discolouring it. I have been cleaning it mainly with saliva or meths, but is there any way I should be cleaning it? And if so what with?
Top tip Wayland, I'll have to try it (got too blades tempering in the oven as I type ).Wayland said:The first thing I do with a carbon steel knife is wrap the blade in tissue paper and soak it in vinegar.
Leave it over night and take the paper off. the blade should now be somewhere between grey and black in colour.
Rinse in water and dry off.
Now you have oxidized the surface in a controlled way and a little oil will keep the blade in this condition. (I use veg. oil because my knives are used for food sometimes)
The vinegar treatment does two things. Firstly it makes the surface much more forgiving in use. Secondly it stops me from worrying about every speck of tarnishing on the polished surface of my brand new knife.....
lol. Too true.Hoodoo said:Repeat after me: stain is GOOD, stain is GOOD.
Then: knives are TOOLS, knives are TOOLS.
torjusg said:It is wildernesses that are meant to be kept pristine, not knives...
Wayland said:The first thing I do with a carbon steel knife is wrap the blade in tissue paper and soak it in vinegar.
Leave it over night and take the paper off. the blade should now be somewhere between grey and black in colour.
Rinse in water and dry off.
Now you have oxidized the surface in a controlled way and a little oil will keep the blade in this condition. (I use veg. oil because my knives are used for food sometimes)
The vinegar treatment does two things. Firstly it makes the surface much more forgiving in use. Secondly it stops me from worrying about every speck of tarnishing on the polished surface of my brand new knife.....