Quenching a Knife in Liquid Nitrogen! Will it survive?

2023 ж. 4 Қаң.
3 528 247 Рет қаралды

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  • Thanks for inviting me on to talk about quenching!

    @KnifeSteelNerds@KnifeSteelNerds Жыл бұрын
    • @KnifeSteelNerds I've just started watching but know I'm going to enjoy this. Cheers from Australia.

      @BradGryphonn@BradGryphonn Жыл бұрын
    • So did he discover a new way to superquench using LN2 or nah?

      @Esoterrible@Esoterrible Жыл бұрын
    • @@Esoterrible Haha no, I'm sure Dr. Thomas knows that quenching faster has that result. But it can cause warping and inconsistent hardness!

      @NFTI@NFTI Жыл бұрын
    • What a pity that you didn't tell us the number of hardness of the regular steel that you quenched in liquid nitrogen. 😎

      @u.e.u.e.@u.e.u.e. Жыл бұрын
    • @knifesteelnerds hey dr Thomas, did Nate just, practically, nitride his knives when he quench in liquid nitrogen?

      @Herr_Scheissemann@Herr_Scheissemann Жыл бұрын
  • pro tip, when dropping hardened steel to make chips fly off, safety glasses worn over your eyes instead of on top of your head will protect your eyes from small metal fragments, atleast the top of your head is safe!

    @christhorney@christhorney Жыл бұрын
    • @christhorney, yeah, that's what I was thinking as well. PPE doesn't do a body much good if it isn't worn properly.

      @fredericapanon207@fredericapanon207 Жыл бұрын
    • Can’t blame him too hard for forgetting

      @austygo3563@austygo3563 Жыл бұрын
    • Not to mention any concrete that could chip out too

      @mc-sp8zr@mc-sp8zr Жыл бұрын
    • Safety third

      @mr.j7901@mr.j7901 Жыл бұрын
    • Pro tip he will do what he wants.

      @bmffafo5004@bmffafo5004 Жыл бұрын
  • That jar not shattering under thermal extremes is the real hero.

    @paladin181@paladin181 Жыл бұрын
    • I'm glad I'm not the only one that thought that lol

      @1stSgtSoulStealer@1stSgtSoulStealer Жыл бұрын
    • I can see your point for the oil jar since oil have high boiling point. but generally, unless the hot knife touches the jar, the jar is insulated from the temperature extremes by the liquid medium. anything above the liquid's boiling point simply vaporize before heating up the jar itself.

      @nilebrixton8436@nilebrixton8436 Жыл бұрын
    • @@nilebrixton8436 And when it comes to the nitrogen jar. It never experienced any other extremes of temperatures other than extreme cold. As you can see, even during the quencing process, the jar is covered in frost.

      @rockmcdwayne1710@rockmcdwayne1710 Жыл бұрын
    • I was surprices it didnt... nice jar...

      @Patrik6920@Patrik6920 Жыл бұрын
    • The jars experienced minimal temprature change

      @ianmackinnon2427@ianmackinnon2427 Жыл бұрын
  • When the results aren't what you hoped for, but you keep the footage and post the results anyway. The mark of a true professional and scientist.

    @sumelar@sumelar11 ай бұрын
    • Actual science, not the garbage we saw the past 3 years of nonsense.

      @imnotsmartbutimdumb@imnotsmartbutimdumb10 ай бұрын
    • The 'file drawer problem' is an actual problem when doing scientific tests and studies. When testing a hypothesis, if the results do not support the tester's hypothesis, or does not show a major spread of results (usually an extreme of some sort) then the data goes no further than the tester's 'file drawer', which leads to publication bias. When you get results that are mundane or normal, that's boring and doesn't feel like it's worth publishing. You'd only want to publish something exciting, like getting results that are out of the ordinary. Basically, it's good to show your results and data even if the results are mundane, unimpressive or ordinary.

      @gooblaka@gooblaka10 ай бұрын
    • Besides the fact that if you dont fully submerge the entire blade at once the structural pattern of the blade will be different at different parts and will be extremely weak where the pattern changes. Its like day 1 of forging knives. If you cant fully quench your knife is screwed up and he screwed up every single one so this whole video is just a waste of time and stupid for misleading people when all data is worthless because he doesnt know how to properly quench a knife.

      @Dudeston@Dudeston10 ай бұрын
    • ​@@gooblaka not when your data is screwed because you cant properly quench a single knife. This is all worthless unless you think half quenching then quenching the rest 10 seconds later is the data you wanted but news flash itll probably break at the point where the quench es didnt match up. Thats not data thats fucking common sense so stop trying to glorify this failure of a video that never should have been posted by saying its all data. Yeah it is data. Data that everyone has known since the 1800s

      @Dudeston@Dudeston10 ай бұрын
    • So quenching the knife properly in liquid nitrogen result of a stronger knife....... ⚡⚡Very interesting.

      @ryanmahadeo3132@ryanmahadeo313210 ай бұрын
  • Those safety glasses are doing a great job protecting your forehead!

    @think2023@think20239 ай бұрын
  • As a blacksmith, most of the time when I've done a quench I've used water. Mainly because I haven't cared to get steel that uses an oil quench. However I want to point out that there are also projects that would require you to do a super quench to get it done properly. A super quench is salt water with soap added as well, and gets an even harder piece. Might make for an interesting follow up. There are a bunch of knife makers on you tube and they can teach you a lot about what we know of quenching.

    @LanggerDangger@LanggerDangger Жыл бұрын
    • I was remembering reading about salt water a long time ago.

      @CaptainFishbones@CaptainFishbones Жыл бұрын
    • when he mentioned that he was showing why you use oil over water to quench i was like "what do you mean??" people have been quenching blades with water for atleast 3000 years rather successfully. i know this because homers odyssey makes a mention of it. japanese sword makers also used water, and we know how good those are. speaking of, if you have never read how the japanese quenched their swords, do so, its ingenious as fk.

      @TIannone@TIannone Жыл бұрын
    • Oh wow. I love learning this stuff. Do you know why it makes a difference?

      @nikiTricoteuse@nikiTricoteuse Жыл бұрын
    • @Niki P it largely has to do with how quickly the heat leaves the metal. All solids have a crystalline structure, graphite, rubies, butter... metal is no exception. Temperature has a great effect on the crystalline structure of steel, not so much pure iron because carbon atoms are different sizes from iron ones they have difficulty fitting together nicely. This is actually where steel gets its strength mostly. Anyway as the steel cools the atoms try to align in the crystalline structure... all at once. However there's no higher command coordinating all of it so the atoms crystallizing in one area usually aren't aligned the same way as another. These Crystals grow until they run into their neighbors that aren't aligned exactly the same way, which is nearly impossible in 3 dimensional space. These form the grains in the steel metallurgists talk about. The slower the cooling the bigger the grains the softer the steel. The faster the cooling the smaller the grains, the harder and more brittle the steel. Most knife steels have carbon content that are at ideal hardness that balances edge retention and durability with an oil quench. I mean you don't want a knife that's chipping with every cut.

      @LanggerDangger@LanggerDangger Жыл бұрын
    • @@LanggerDangger Thanks Jaryn. So, if I've understood properly, what you want is a quenching agent that gives the right balance of hardness without making the metal too brittle and, on top of that you want a metal that retains its sharpness? I imagine that all those things factor into the cost and is why good knives are SO much dearer. Learned not to bother with cheap knives years back and was lucky to buy a reasonably good set at a garage sale from someone moving overseas. 10 years on they're still great and l think l've only had to sharpen them properly 2 or 3 times. One of those times was cos l chipped my favourite knife on the bone in a leg of lamb. It annoyed me so much that, l had to buy a whetstone and grind it down.

      @nikiTricoteuse@nikiTricoteuse Жыл бұрын
  • Fun test. As a knife maker the biggest problem with rapid cooling (water, nitrogen) is stress cracks. A lot of times these won’t show until you sand the blade or during the tempering. Great video.

    @66falconcoupe@66falconcoupe Жыл бұрын
    • True it’s hard to rapidly cool evenly. The faster it cools the smaller the crystal formations you’ll get. Maybe if the blade were thinner and the liquid nitrogen spread evenly and immediately for a quench it might work.

      @fluffinmcpuffin1879@fluffinmcpuffin1879 Жыл бұрын
    • oil and fat quenching is the winner for me

      @royalecrafts6252@royalecrafts6252 Жыл бұрын
    • I only quench my blades in the blood of my enemies, its traditional

      @SpiraSpiraSpira@SpiraSpiraSpira Жыл бұрын
    • I saw a friend of mine water quench a knife and it cracked so badly he was able to snap the knife in his hands. Took a bit of effort but less than I was expecting and it certainly would've stood up to even it's first use.

      @LanggerDangger@LanggerDangger Жыл бұрын
    • That's why we heat the oil a bit first as well. Slows the cooling process

      @joshuaglaude1549@joshuaglaude1549 Жыл бұрын
  • Part of being a scientist is both accepting your hypothesis being wrong as a good thing as you have learned from it. And considering on why your hypothesis is wrong and how that can lead to future tests or applications. Props for keeping these in your video :)

    @eros5420@eros54209 ай бұрын
  • As a knifemaker who forges I can tell you that part of my process is to "normalize" my blades prior to heat treatment to minimize any unequal stresses imposed by the forging process. There are several ways to normalize but the key is get the blade up to critical temperature (the point at which it becomes non-magnetic for most non-stainless alloys) and then SLOWLY allow it to cool. One of the best ways I found to do this is to set the kiln to the appropriate critical temperature, allow it to reach that temp and soak for a while, and then just turn the kiln off and allow it to cool overnight. You can also do this in your forge, and although I certainly have less control over how quickly it cools, that seems to work just fine. You can also bring it up to heat in your kiln or forge and then stick the blade in a bucket full of vermiculite or lime ash which will allow it to cool more slowly. The key here is to have plenty of vermiculite or lime ash surrounding each blade. And for the record, I definitely HAVE had a knife shatter when I dropped it after quenching. I'm always really careful with just-quenched knives until I've had a chance to temper them.

    @Hagemann666@Hagemann666 Жыл бұрын
    • annealing is allowing the steel to cool as slow as it gets, normalizing is usaully air cooling the blade or leaving it in the kiln overnight like you said

      @bungaboy-ne4ll@bungaboy-ne4ll16 күн бұрын
  • Couple of comments: Oil quench tanks normally have a lot of circulation to help with the heat transfer. The first quench in that steel tube was horrible and didn't get anywhere near its potential hardness. Second, you should always do a light surface grind or at least clean up the part with emery paper before hardness testing. You'll always get a bit of surface decarburization that will affect your test results. (even with a neutral atmosphere furnace) The nitrogen quench didn't work the way you expected because all it did was vaporize the nitrogen near the hot steel so in effect all you got was a frigid air quench with splashes of LN2. If you put it into a very fast stream of LN2 so that it could carry away the heat before it vaporized you might get the cooling you expect, but I doubt if the knife would survive intact.

    @the_omg3242@the_omg3242 Жыл бұрын
    • I was thinking the same thing. Simple, basic but NOT the maximum quench in any of the fluids. Boiling the quenching fluid is BAD. Gases are inefficient compared to a liquid at removing heat. Sandwiching between metal plates, with each plate cooled by LN2 (or an even more effective refrigerant) could produce a quicker quench. However, the temperature shock resistance of the steel is likely MORE important than the quenching speed.

      @haroldhenderson2824@haroldhenderson2824 Жыл бұрын
    • @@haroldhenderson2824 Actively cooled plates wouldn't produce a fast enough quench for an oil or water hardening steel, simply because the heat conduction through the plates is still less than the heat conduction submerged in a liquid. You actually would get a better heat transfer if you just used bigger plates for more mass (and/or switch to copper). They would be superb options for air hardening stainless steels that benefit from cryo treatments though, as you wouldn't have to split the quenching process into two separate events. Might even be able to pick up an extra point in hardness over convention cryo treatments if you could go straight into cryo during the plate quench. Whether the plates could handle the extreme temperature gradient or not is an unknown that I wish I could experiment with. I do agree that the quenching tests here were subpar in all regards, as well as the hardness testing protocol, but the heat treating and hardness testing process can accommodate a lot of variability along the way. I certainly wouldn't quench or test any of my knives in this manner, but that doesn't mean it won't harden the steel or give grossly erroneous readings either. It's good enough for a demonstration, just not good enough for a study or analysis.

      @Skinflaps_Meatslapper@Skinflaps_Meatslapper Жыл бұрын
    • Aye, true. Should keep the LN2 moving to have it work. Idk about the oil. Circulating that oil will increase the cooling, that is accelerate the heat pulled away from the knife, but if you're using oil, I'm not sure if that's desirable considering you want to cool slower, probably, if you're using oil.

      @eleithias@eleithias Жыл бұрын
    • @@eleithias You still want oil circulation to give you uniformity in cooling. Still oil will boil away from areas of the part with more mass to hold the heat just like his LN2, but to a lesser degree. While O1 steel wasn't common for customers to use when I worked in heat treating, we did see it once in a while. It's somewhat more crack prone than other machine steels so we'd quench in a tank that was heated to 180 degrees F and had a more gentle agitation than our larger tanks. One thing that wasn't mentioned in this video is polymer quenching. It's somewhere between oil and water for cooling rate and it's often used on parts with a larger cross section where oil doesn't cool fast enough but water is too prone to causing cracks. With almost all types of quench, you want to stop cooling it when it's in the 130-150 F temperature range. Also, the quench is never the end of the process. All parts are tempered after quenching to take some of the stress out of them and fine tune the final hardness. This can range from 300 degrees on case hardened parts that you want to keep at 60-64 RC to 800-900 degrees on machine steels that you want to be more malable. (like a set of forks on a forklift)

      @the_omg3242@the_omg3242 Жыл бұрын
    • Yeah impromptu leidenfrost effect

      @charliebaker1427@charliebaker1427 Жыл бұрын
  • I remember a few years back when i worked at the mine as a welder, I was welding a ball hitch socket onto a trailer that way it could be pulled by the trucks on the site. After I was done, the guy that requested the job came buy to get it and it was still the process of air cooling. He asked how much longer it would take. I told him give it about 30 minutes and it should be good to go. He wasn't happy about that and walked over to the cooler, pulled out a bag of ice and set it on the welding site. He just looked at me and smirked like he had a big brain moment. I just shook my head, told him I'll see him in a little bit, and walked away... He came back about an hour later. Can anyone guess why? XD

    @NautsuoGraysson@NautsuoGraysson Жыл бұрын
    • Why aren't the results like your weld? Is he using better steel than you or something ?

      @WALKUREX@WALKUREX10 ай бұрын
    • @@WALKUREX because rapidly cooling welded metal makes makes it brittle.

      @NautsuoGraysson@NautsuoGraysson10 ай бұрын
    • @Daddy 1. You’re. If you are going to talk trash, at least have proper grammar. 2. I am neither a furry nor a fem boy. My avatar is not covered in fur, which is a requirement to be a furry. Don’t use terms you don’t know the meaning of. 3. Even if I was either of those thing, there are no rules saying you can’t be a furry or a femboy and working in the mine. A furry is a fetish that isn’t something that should be talked about in a workplace environment. And a femboy is just a personality type and not something that will bar you from seeking a place of employment. 4. Get over yourself.

      @NautsuoGraysson@NautsuoGraysson10 ай бұрын
    • @Daddy the twinks yearn for the mines

      @prestongarvey2599@prestongarvey259910 ай бұрын
    • @daddy6885 I don't think you should be on the internet there daddy. Please go back to reading your newspaper.

      @tisjester@tisjester10 ай бұрын
  • Thank GOD I found this channel! Loved your format on TKOR, and how you carried Grant's legacy there. That channel is just not the same. Their loss. Love your content, bro!

    @dmosbbq366@dmosbbq36610 ай бұрын
  • Hey Nate, you have to do a part 2 of this video. You've found the outside hardness, but there's an important step 2; Grain structure. The internal of the blade is what's most important during a quench, it'd be interesting to see the grain structure of the variations. I know it's simply snapping blades in half, but it goes a long way in teaching knife making/black smithing and why certain mediums are used to quench.

    @justinebright2328@justinebright2328 Жыл бұрын
    • i agree,hardness is only part of the equation.

      @fenrirlokisson8270@fenrirlokisson8270 Жыл бұрын
    • Yeah, the non oil stuff is probably very brittle.

      @jlaw131985@jlaw131985 Жыл бұрын
    • I've snapped quit a few cheap no name steel knives. And I've had a tank of a knife from kabar with aus 8. Let's get a followup video!

      @n7titan243@n7titan243 Жыл бұрын
    • There is a crappy cardboard bailer at my work. I swear there will be some kind of metal snap eventually. The bailer is barely ok if the eject door is not over tightened. But it doesn't matter how many times we teach people, they are going to over tighten it and when I un-wheel-cog the door it pops so loud that I am covering my ears best I can. and yup the spiral cogger is bent slightly. I swear something is going to snap apart. More issues with this bailer, there was some kind of steel cable running looped through and it was getting pinched every time the upper smasher was lifted. more issues, it is just about impossible to fully fill the bail because they only welded one set of 4 hooks on the door that are not even big enough, so cardboard comes spilling out at 50%-75% of a full bail... so I am wasting my time at the end of the day by making 50% bails because the next crews don't know how, and females are no longer allowed to make a bail (for well reasons and events that repeatedly happened)... more issues with the machine, I have to walk about 30 feet away and still cover my ears waiting for the ejector to reset because the bang hurts my ears, I learned to not sweep the scraps to somewhat silence the bang but it still can hurt my ears 30 feet away.

      @spacefightertzz@spacefightertzz Жыл бұрын
    • True! This is why I would doubt the line about that quenching was the most important part in a heat treatment. It is strictly necessary. But the grain structure is usually ruined during the heating cycle, too long, too high, not long enough, not high enough, and these values change from alloy to alloy and even from batch to batch of the same alloy.

      @jackmclane1826@jackmclane1826 Жыл бұрын
  • I would recommend Sprite, as it is great at quenching your thirst

    @Jais271@Jais271 Жыл бұрын
    • Or Gatorade, plants love electrolytes maybe blades do too.

      @joshbenoit2859@joshbenoit2859 Жыл бұрын
    • @@joshbenoit2859 That makes no sense at all, plants and steel have nothing in common. That's why I use Apple juice to harden the metal since it's rich in Iron.

      @GolenCheeseIt@GolenCheeseIt Жыл бұрын
    • 🤣

      @MrOvergryph@MrOvergryph Жыл бұрын
    • @@joshbenoit2859 brine solutions are popular for quenching since they are a bit less prone to forming vapor jackets, so Gatorade might genuinely be a good quenching medium.

      @garethbaus5471@garethbaus5471 Жыл бұрын
    • Everyone knows Gatorade is the ultimate thirst quencher! Lol 😂

      @beaudill8929@beaudill8929 Жыл бұрын
  • I worked in an industrial gear shop, and they always oil quenched the gears after machining. I always enjoyed watching the quenching process because of the flames they kicked up while being dipped into the oil.

    @urstandingonmyfoot@urstandingonmyfoot9 ай бұрын
  • It all comes down to the vibrations of the molecules and how close they are together at the time of cooling. Very cool to think about

    @mumblez22@mumblez226 ай бұрын
  • I love that Nate not only experiments with the question, he also brings on a known metallurgist to explain why things happened the way they did.

    @negadoge@negadoge Жыл бұрын
    • A Metallurgist would rip this vid to shreds.

      @billhochella2555@billhochella2555 Жыл бұрын
    • @@billhochella2555 maybe if it was being presented as advice and not the classic Grant-era TKOR "lmao what if we did _____" format. just cuz you're pissy and missed the point doesn't mean everyone else will be

      @joshuacampbell17@joshuacampbell17 Жыл бұрын
    • It seems he was very disappointed that the nitrogen worked well. In fact there was no discussion what so ever. Hell they only quenched with water for a few thousand years. Its hard to believe that knife didn't explode and kill the whole planet, just shatter it completely.

      @jasonrhodes9683@jasonrhodes9683 Жыл бұрын
    • @@billhochella2555 tell me you didn't watch the video without saying you didn't watch the video...

      @negadoge@negadoge Жыл бұрын
    • @@negadoge he's right. I'm a material engineer and this video had a lot of things wrong, from the process control to the measurements, to the vague explanation of the phd dude. it was a train wreck, but for popular purposes it's fine :) people outside the field won't notice them, and it's fun

      @Hitokiiry@Hitokiiry Жыл бұрын
  • One thing that you didn't talk about was the microfractures you tend to get when quenching is a medium that is too harsh for that steel. That is really one of the biggest reasons you need to stay with the correct quenchant.

    @bigernbladesmith@bigernbladesmith Жыл бұрын
    • Well, the doctor did right at the end of the video. "If you cool slower, that leads to less chance of warping or distortion or size changes or cracking and so that's beneficial." Still, yeah, probably should have talked about that more in the video as it's a really important factor when dealing with steel.

      @ColonelSandersLite@ColonelSandersLite Жыл бұрын
    • Yes! This so much. That is the main reason people don't use water, not because water can't quench to a similar hardness.

      @LordSaliss@LordSaliss Жыл бұрын
    • @@LordSaliss yup, I quench knives in water because I was making knives with hamons and I don't like the look of oil hamons. A good way to remove warps is to put the knife immediately after quenching it into a straightener I used three c vices with two straight bar stocks to hold the knife straight and then temper it.

      @1810jeff@1810jeff Жыл бұрын
  • Bro, you could afford a mansion if you start selling liquid nitrogen quenched katanas to mall ninjas for way too much money 🤣

    @bschneidez@bschneidez9 ай бұрын
  • The way he said 'Liquid Nitrogen', I was expecting a sponsor segment right after

    @SanHydronoid@SanHydronoid9 ай бұрын
  • The reason the water one may have broken off at the spot where it wasn't quenched was because when you hardened the blade, the hardened section grain boundary was pulling the softer section. The drop allowed the difference in the microstructure to come apart.

    @aztharz5637@aztharz5637 Жыл бұрын
    • Water turns to gas at an explosive rate when heat is added like that. Liquid nitrogen is a slightly slower and more contained transfer

      @beentheredonethat5908@beentheredonethat590824 күн бұрын
  • To expand on what Justin said here, when you snap a blade in half to check grain structure, you should notice a drastic difference in the texture of the cross-section. Something like a difference between coarse beach and and fine art or play sand. Sometimes even more fine like corn starch or baking powder. If you can see where the texture changes between inside and outside of the steel, that's an excellent indication that the quenching medium was not suited for that specific steel.

    @fear_regret_88@fear_regret_88 Жыл бұрын
    • Why wouldn’t you get a container capable of submerging the entire knife? It would obviously cool faster if the entire knife is submerged. There are so many scientific channels on KZhead. Why anyone would sit through this is baffling.

      @ThePlatinumKing1735@ThePlatinumKing1735 Жыл бұрын
    • @1stAlphaZulu Quenching the entire blade, handle included, would be a waste of time

      @gvhgnjhg1387@gvhgnjhg1387 Жыл бұрын
    • Actually you don’t typically even *want* the spine or the tang hardened, you want them quite resilient to hand stress and strain. Only the edge carrying elements need to be hardened.

      @Gefionius@Gefionius Жыл бұрын
    • @@Gefionius But that is also where it will break, right at the transition from hardened to soft.

      @brettbuck7362@brettbuck7362 Жыл бұрын
    • Who’s Justin?

      @realtalkwiththeking7862@realtalkwiththeking7862 Жыл бұрын
  • Been watching these types of videos a lot more now that they have a channel of their own, felt odd posting for someone else. Respect for all the time and effort you have put into everything.

    @brendolbreadwar2671@brendolbreadwar26719 ай бұрын
  • I learned a lot from this video Nate!!! Great job.

    @littlejonathorn6860@littlejonathorn6860 Жыл бұрын
  • As a knife maker and a musician, I was really interested in the differing tones the three methods produced, when dropped 😀

    @jagoq53@jagoq53 Жыл бұрын
    • I'm glad someone else noticed that, too! (non musician *_or_* knife maker)

      @DUKE_of_RAMBLE@DUKE_of_RAMBLE Жыл бұрын
    • Yep, former high school percussion and several musicians in the family I get a good ear for tones... garbage for notes lol

      @N3M1515@N3M1515 Жыл бұрын
    • Thanks for noting that as well. I picked up on that immediately between the oil cooled one and the water & nitro ones which were similar. The oil quenched one definitely had a higher (tighter) pitch. I was wondering if that relates to hardness domehow, as I know the faster it is cooled the more chance of stress cracks. I wonder if the oil one has a more thorough/durable "strength" than the others. I wish he could address that.

      @kimberlyfrost4730@kimberlyfrost4730 Жыл бұрын
    • Tonewood is imaginary.

      @relativeparadox9567@relativeparadox9567 Жыл бұрын
    • @Relative Paradox Certainly for a solid-body electric.

      @jagoq53@jagoq53 Жыл бұрын
  • Nate: Drops knifes to see if they break Also Nate: Wears Safety Glasses on his head

    @senfdame528@senfdame528 Жыл бұрын
    • That part was really hard to watch, I'll be honest 😬

      @TheTechnopider@TheTechnopider Жыл бұрын
    • I noticed

      @Golgi-Gyges@Golgi-Gyges Жыл бұрын
    • was looking for this comment... that was scary 😱

      @AAlchemy@AAlchemy Жыл бұрын
    • Yeah. Safety glasses aren’t protecting squat on top of his head!

      @GlennCorwin@GlennCorwin Жыл бұрын
    • @@GlennCorwin Well to be fair they are sorta protecting the top of his head 😞

      @phillhuddleston9445@phillhuddleston9445 Жыл бұрын
  • Well done sir. I was about to start my day when I saw this video thumbnail and I clicked on it. then the video was interesting enough that I stayed through the entire thing even though I have a lot of stuff I want to get done and I am super excited for it. It’s kind of cool seeing somebody running an experiment using the stuff he has access to. This is how I learn stuff. not necessarily the most controlled environment but interesting results. I might look into the subject more later. makes me wonder if there are certain types of metals that need to be quenched with some thing super cold.

    @2teepeepictures382@2teepeepictures3829 ай бұрын
  • Timing is a huge factor. You'd have to test the surface and the core for hardness. It would be interesting to see a thermocouple embedded on the surface and another in the core to see how fast both the media and style of quenching does what it does.

    @jmi967@jmi9677 ай бұрын
  • Now this is what An Experiment with Nate is all about. Brings me back to the Nate and Grant Duo days. I don’t comment on here much but you have come so far over the years my friend. Thank you for keeping this style of content alive. Cheers🎉

    @joshua5483@joshua5483 Жыл бұрын
  • I think the reason the water quenched knife broke is because there was a bunch of tension in that area. Hot expands, cold contracts. So that part was feeling the expansion from the heat and contraction from the cold all the way until it finally hit the same temperature as the rest. It's the same reason the layers of an ABS 3D print are weaker if you don't have an enclosure. Hot near the bed (and hot near the hot-end), cold everywhere else, you even get layers that snap apart mid print because the force is so strong.

    @miranda.cooper@miranda.cooper Жыл бұрын
    • Metallurgical engineer here, The reason that quenched steel breaks "easily" is because the internal crystalline structure is under high stress. The chemical composition can make different compounds, pearlite, cementite, martensite, austenite, ledeburite, etc. In general instances such as carbon steel, we are mainly talking about 2 transformations, during the heating process pearlite and cementite turn to austenite and ledeburite + cementite, and during the quenching austenite and ledeburite + cementite turn into martensite and retained austenite with some pearlite leftovers. Here the martensite is the important part, because is a very hard yet brittle phase (harder = more brittle) that isn't in equilibrium that forms only during rapid cooldown in very fine "needles", that means it will easily change yet again during tempering into very fine cementite crystals (but I digress). Martensite is the second hardest compound of carbon and iron, second only to Cementite. but finer crystals help distribute the energy more uniformly.

      @apollyon4578@apollyon4578 Жыл бұрын
    • @@apollyon4578 Isn't this why a proper temper is so important in such high carbon steels, because of how brittle they get after hardening?

      @HavocHounds1988@HavocHounds1988 Жыл бұрын
    • @@apollyon4578 It is interesting tho that it broke at where the quickly and slowly quenched areas met. I wonder if that's coincidence, stress or something to do with the grain structure.

      @Kenionatus@Kenionatus Жыл бұрын
    • @@HavocHounds1988 Indeed, the change from "out of equilibrium" martensite to stable finer cementite is done during tempering, but that is an even more complex phenomenon due to different factors like temperature, time, chemistry, and desired hardness. too long and the finer grains will very slightly fuse and act as almost one (this is also a process used extensively) too hot and you will return the steel back to its soft form.

      @apollyon4578@apollyon4578 Жыл бұрын
    • @@Kenionatus That's a great question, all hardening and particularly differential hardening is very vulnerable to microfractures and chipping. these microfractures and chips create what are known as stress concentration zones. The smaller the volume, less thermal mass, thus faster cooling and higher chance of fractures in the case of the tip and in the case of the handle or grip, the difference in cooling speeds between sections make these vulnerabilities very likely. Also, O1 steel is a steel designed to be quenched in oil, not too fast, not too slow, quenching it in water is waaay too fast for it. There are different "codes" for different quenching mediums, like O1 is designed for Oil, W1 high speed tool steel is for Water and A2 steel is (you guessed it) Air Blast. Liquid nitrogen isn't as aggressive as a coolant because it forms a gas layer between the hot surface and itself, this effect is known as the Leidenfrost effect and because of that, it can be even less effective at cooling than the recommended quenching medium.

      @apollyon4578@apollyon4578 Жыл бұрын
  • It's good to note that you also don't want blades too hardened, *Especially* if they are longer, thinner, or experience a lot of sudden kinetic trauma, notably because the give in the metal allows it to not crack, fracture, or snap under the load that you put it under, but at the same time it's important to make it hard enough so it isn't super pliable and deforming or blunting the blade with every cut.

    @thewolfstu@thewolfstu9 ай бұрын
    • @@remster1159 Yeah, I was saying you don't wanna over do it.

      @thewolfstu@thewolfstu6 ай бұрын
    • You don't want retained austenite, not much anyways.. just temper or soak at a lower temp for less dissolved carbon for lower hardness. You probably don't want to not fully through harden your steel - Imagine how soft the center is if the surface isn't even fully hard.

      @mikafoxx2717@mikafoxx27172 ай бұрын
  • amazing subject. I took on automotive chores welding in 2006. I keep my own unwritten book in my head about quenching. you don't know what you made, until a whole year has gone to meet the day you made it.

    @bgd73@bgd732 ай бұрын
  • Nate, I can’t help but feel that Grant would be very proud of this video! Keep up the great work brother! Really been enjoying your solo content and can’t wait to see how your channel grows!

    @ExtraZero@ExtraZero Жыл бұрын
    • Fuck I miss Grant!

      @soggyman3852@soggyman3852 Жыл бұрын
    • @@soggyman3852 dude was one of the best people I ever watched on YT. I feel like the more Nate goes the more of that energy he brings that made me watch Grant. Totally here for it

      @ExtraZero@ExtraZero Жыл бұрын
    • @@ExtraZero I get where you’re coming from bro. KZhead was just different back then

      @soggyman3852@soggyman3852 Жыл бұрын
    • This channel reminds me of the early days of The King of Random, I love it

      @qara_ch@qara_ch Жыл бұрын
  • I love how there was no build-up, no great speech or hook, he just dropped it right into the liquid nitrogen and my jaw dropped all the same. Subscribed.

    @galvendorondo@galvendorondo Жыл бұрын
  • Your channel means so much to us. Thanks buddy

    @sarahhennessy8233@sarahhennessy823310 ай бұрын
  • Correction, knives are quenched primarily in oil. Some steels can be quenched in water and this is the preferred method for traditional sword smiths in Japan. The water quench is part of what adds the curve.

    @metgath@metgath9 ай бұрын
  • 4:59 A flawless demonstration of the proper use of eye protection.

    @adamself2463@adamself2463 Жыл бұрын
  • i miss nate’s TKOR days but i’m glad to see he is doing so well for himself

    @zacharyreid7557@zacharyreid7557 Жыл бұрын
    • I miss Grant tbh, he was the OG and I loved watching his forgery videos when I was younger.

      @v01d_r34l1ty@v01d_r34l1ty Жыл бұрын
    • @@insanitywolf5049Don’t worry He is averaging more views then TKOR now 😂 They really didn’t think about how removing the last piece of grants legacy would affect the channel

      @EternallyFrost@EternallyFrost Жыл бұрын
    • @@EternallyFrost 12M subs, 100k average views, this means channel is dead. 200k subs, and uhh... about the same average I guess, this one is doing very well.

      @dingdingdingdiiiiing@dingdingdingdiiiiing Жыл бұрын
    • @@dingdingdingdiiiiing some aren't even breaking 50k.

      @mandolinman2006@mandolinman2006 Жыл бұрын
    • @@mandolinman2006 yep, last video released 7 days ago is sitting at 30k views

      @Muffin.Creations@Muffin.Creations Жыл бұрын
  • A little bit of extra info. There are some steels that can aquire a specific structure if cooled down at the right speed/temprature. One thing that can be done is to cool it down inside another metal of lower melting point (such as aluminum) it is actually quite interesting how the temperature achieved, the cooling speed and the carbon (and other material contents) can highly change the outcome and give varied properties to the steel

    @Fernando_Cabanillas@Fernando_Cabanillas9 ай бұрын
  • Bro the fact that the water and nitrogen dripped knives weren’t dipped all the way triggered me A LOT. Well done for the second part !!

    @Nyrroz@Nyrroz8 ай бұрын
  • Glad to see you still going strong Nate!!!

    @JackInTheShop@JackInTheShop Жыл бұрын
  • The sound difference on the drop between these after the quench is fascinating. I'd love to see the grain under a microscope.

    @threadmiser4914@threadmiser4914 Жыл бұрын
  • Heat treatment of steel is about martensitic conversion of austenite. There are several factors at play. The hardening temperature, quenching temperature and quenching medium all depend on the steel type. Some steels are more forgiving than others. Research your material before attempting to heat treat it.

    @mrebula3@mrebula37 ай бұрын
  • Its not just hardness its also how brittle the steel is. I am betting a shatter test would be very illuminating

    @Grey_Wulfe@Grey_Wulfe Жыл бұрын
  • So glad to see Nate thriving outside of the old channel and doing amazing!

    @A_Crumplebottom@A_Crumplebottom Жыл бұрын
    • Did the old channel end?

      @bachlava7@bachlava7 Жыл бұрын
    • Did he get divorced

      @skateboarder1000@skateboarder1000 Жыл бұрын
    • New to this mans videos. What old channel and what happened? If you don't mind explaining.

      @allmyself666@allmyself666 Жыл бұрын
    • @@allmyself666 He was on the King of Random that got baught out and milked. He is now doing his own thing and thriving :D

      @A_Crumplebottom@A_Crumplebottom Жыл бұрын
    • @@A_Crumplebottom I don't think TKOR was bought out, although it's quality of content definitely went down hill not long after Grant died.

      @garethbaus5471@garethbaus5471 Жыл бұрын
  • I like the way Nate wears his safety glasses while testing hardened steel to see if it shatters. "Safety always priority number one!" 🤣

    @Naomi_Boyd@Naomi_Boyd Жыл бұрын
    • I almost had to look away when he thrust the knife into the liquid nitrogen. He had gloves and glasses.. I feel like some kind of coat would have been appropriate.

      @deathm3t4l1@deathm3t4l1 Жыл бұрын
    • In his laboratory, safety is not numbe one priority.

      @purenatural5736@purenatural5736 Жыл бұрын
    • ... or the way he only juggles the *cold* knives...

      @jefflittle8913@jefflittle8913 Жыл бұрын
    • @@jefflittle8913 I don't know much about his channel. But... This being my first video to experience watching it's dubious. Why the fuck was he slapping his durometer and openly stating the shit hadn't been calibrated. Weirdo

      @deathm3t4l1@deathm3t4l1 Жыл бұрын
  • A uniform grid of molecules produces the maximum strength of a material. I’ve seen good results of metal chilled in liquid nitrogen to the coldest temp then slowly allowed to warm at room temperature. This compresses the molecules be closer together then, when allowed to slowly warm, the molecules spread in a more uniform, even pattern. The handle broke in the drop test because it was cooled at a different rate. The molecule pattern was different which produced a weakness.

    @robav8or@robav8or9 ай бұрын
  • Dr. Thomas is a wonderful human and amazing metallurgy genius! He gave us maxament!

    @JohnnyProfit13@JohnnyProfit139 ай бұрын
  • Hey Nate. Glad your continuing the videos.. the reasons I loved the other KZhead channel was because the guy was making stuff I always wanted to make and experiment with. And he done it at home. Which was even better. Making your own gun powder and liquid nitrogen was just amazing. Learning the stuff no one else can or will teach you was the greatest part of that show. It was the learning part. Learning the stuff I always wanted to know.. making the stuff I always wanted to make.. good job and good luck. I’m excited to see what curiosities you have.

    @myownthoughts969@myownthoughts969 Жыл бұрын
  • Nate, great video! Being in the heat treat industry, I was surprised to not see the knife crack in half while in nitrogen quench.

    @Joseph_Streubel@Joseph_Streubel Жыл бұрын
  • I have a tool I made eons ago for the International Space Station that was made from Inconel 718. We used a cryo quench to help with ductility at low temps. It was basically a space version of a Stanley wonderbar.

    @mikedrever7760@mikedrever77609 ай бұрын
  • There are several college courses on Strength of Materials that cover this subject of steel hardenability. The steel composition, the iron to carbon ratio, and other alloying elements such as nickle, manganese, etc. added to affect tensile strength and hardenability determine the hardness more than the quenching media. A 1060 steel will be harder than a 1040 steel, for instance. The quinching media affects the time above the steel's transition temperature, or the temperature at which the transition freezes to fix the percent ferrite in the steel matrix. The liquid nitrogen quinch may have produced a 'surface' hardness by alloying a nitrogen compound, which may only be a few tenths of thousandths of an inch thick, a good deal harder than the core hardness. Nitriding is a common procedure for producing a hard surface with a less hard but tougher core. The hardness testing procedure is important. Rockwell A, B, C, D, etc., through V, tests will yield slightly different results from the Brinell test, for instance, and the indenter's shape and the applied load are both important.

    @d.lindsey5583@d.lindsey55832 ай бұрын
  • I think this is more of a editing issue than experiment issue (and I understand this may be a personal thing), but around the 6 min mark when he did the hardness testing, after he stating that he's doing a couple spots on the oil blade and then not doing so on the others, it took me a bit to realize what he did. At first, I thought why he just skipped the nitro blade, I think it was easy for me to mix that up because from that angle, I couldn't tell which blade he was using and there was no indication that he switched blades, it was just a edit cut.

    @chubby_deity3143@chubby_deity3143 Жыл бұрын
    • nope... if you do that experiment 100 times the water quench will be harder than oil 100 times...

      @chrismcaulay7805@chrismcaulay78056 ай бұрын
  • I am really surprised that there was no mention of the "sound" differences in each knife. The oil hardened one had a very distinctive higher pitch when dropped both flat and on the point, from the ones cooled in water & nitrogen. I wonder if THAT relates to hardness as well.

    @kimberlyfrost4730@kimberlyfrost4730 Жыл бұрын
    • High pitch means hardness Lasting vibration means flexibility

      @ludikonj8927@ludikonj89276 ай бұрын
    • @@ludikonj8927 More precisely, lasting vibration means elasticity, not flexibility. It has to "flex" and then return to its prior shape - that is one "vibration".

      @KarlRKaiser@KarlRKaiser6 ай бұрын
    • That is a good way to test if the working face of an avil has been hardened or not. Some light taps with a hammer and see if she sings or not.

      @ShrockWPS@ShrockWPS4 ай бұрын
  • Really cool tests, thank you 😊

    @---jo6fk@---jo6fk Жыл бұрын
  • Nice, the hardness of steel depends on the chimical composition not only on how you coolit down, you can see the FeC diagram and also the heat treatments diagram

    @sosetaucigasa8149@sosetaucigasa8149 Жыл бұрын
    • Yes. Stainless steel being very low carbon might have had something to do with the results of the first batch, haven't looked into it for a while but i think austenite phase exists in stainless up to rather low temps

      @your-mom-irl@your-mom-irl11 ай бұрын
    • @@your-mom-irl Far removed from that myself as well, but I remember some alloys help getting a quench even with low carbon, but you're typically gonna hit more like 35-45 HRC than 50+. As I remember most quenching steels have between .25 and .45% carbon; at .50% you start to be on the brittle side, and more than that and you've got unquencheable iron up to 2.5%. O1, 1045 and 4140 were typical 20 years back as general purpose quenching steels, but I don't know what's common nowadays. There was some quenched stainless we were also using, but I can't recall its name, and it was around the low 40s HRC for thin sheets. Man do I sound like a boomer. XD

      @EddieOtool@EddieOtool9 ай бұрын
  • (5:05) Check out how much the liquid Nitrogen level goes down during that quench; how much evaporated off over the process of adding so much heat to it

    @meganw6007@meganw6007 Жыл бұрын
  • Hearing the different sound frequency between the drop tests was informative. Are you aware of the ability for people to detect large temperature differences in liquids by their poured sound? The Food Theory channel did an interesting video on this. I would be curious to see & hear of any variation of this when experimenting with the sounds of metal using different cooling methods and environments. Metal glass is quite difficult to make because of how quickly it must be cooled, but I'd love to hear it :)

    @omegahunter9@omegahunter9 Жыл бұрын
    • Metal does form different crystal structures inside when heat treated. That's what makes it harder or softer and tougher. So it's a good question! Do the different formations change the tone at all?

      @NFTI@NFTI Жыл бұрын
    • I would bet money that you'd be able to more accurately guess the hardness based on a set of 'standard' sounds. Get a bunch of known hardness coupons, and then 'drop' them in some standard way. Isolate the waveform via the microphone (contact or audio) and then plot the frequency/amplitude vs hardness. (Not a math major, just making guesses)

      @spokehedz@spokehedz Жыл бұрын
    • @@spokehedz Yes! This would be fascinating. You could potentially calibrate a microphone that accurately measures the structure and hardness of different metals (or even non-metals?). Maybe instead of dropping the material an impacting device could create a consistent sound.

      @omegahunter9@omegahunter9 Жыл бұрын
    • Same in Electrical Engineering. I have worked with enough power supplies to know when the units have something wrong just from their sound. Since the hum gets higher or lower depending on current and voltage.

      @jacara1981@jacara1981 Жыл бұрын
    • @@spokehedz Basically what Tuning forks are

      @jacara1981@jacara1981 Жыл бұрын
  • Once attended a metal working class and the quenching went as follows: First in water - then removing the coating so you could see the bare steel - then warming with a blow-torch until the steel turned blue - and then quenching in oil. Fahrenheit - please show temperature in C as well because this is the standard the rest of the world uses...

    @baadtaste1337@baadtaste13379 ай бұрын
  • Generally, when you're dropping pieces of steel expecting chips to come flying off, it's a good idea to take the safety glasses that are on your head and put them over your eyeholes.

    @GeekOfAllness@GeekOfAllness9 ай бұрын
  • 59 minutes and 3.6K views... this channel is finally getting the recognition it deserves.

    @tannernelson@tannernelson Жыл бұрын
    • Engaging in conversation in the comments and the like button will all help his channel grow 👍

      @7-ten@7-ten Жыл бұрын
  • Nate! There is actually a legitimate quenching method that uses liquid nitrogen and water, it's called Martfrost and was developed by a knife making company Mikov in 90's.

    @ninethirtyone4264@ninethirtyone4264 Жыл бұрын
    • Yup, funny thing is the process can be done from room temperature to supercold.

      @africanelectron751@africanelectron751 Жыл бұрын
  • Hey Nate, it was definitely an interesting video, thanks for posting it. With liquid nitrogen; I'm guessing the knife was cooled in nitrogen gas rather than the liquid itself. The vaper barrier on something with extreme thermal difference has to last pretty long. I would think the fastest way to cool the metal, would be to quench it in moving salty ice water. This way the water can be well below freezing temperatures and stay liquid. I think -30°F mercury quench would be even more effective, but might render the blade useless because of mercury contamination. Mercury will still be liquid at -30°F and doesn't boil until 670°F. Not sure what safety measures would be needed to do such an extreme experiment.

    @michaelr.9617@michaelr.961710 ай бұрын
    • The idea of boiling mercury seems fucking scary and fascinating lol. I kind of want to see if anyone has attempted using it as a quenching medium before

      @darmakx99@darmakx999 ай бұрын
    • I know nothing of this topic, what kind of mercury contamination could occur from quenching in it?

      @chefmarcos@chefmarcos9 ай бұрын
    • @@chefmarcos Mercury is toxic by itself. Wanna put it on the blade you're using to cook for your whole family? Unless you want to put an end to your annoying in-laws' days, that's a no-no.

      @EddieOtool@EddieOtool9 ай бұрын
    • German razorsaresaid to be tempered in lead. Solingen???

      @Noone-rt6pw@Noone-rt6pw9 ай бұрын
    • @@chefmarcos Metalic atoms are pretty big and thus even in high temperature the diffusion into steel will be realy slow, in practice i would be suprised if you had more than couple nanometers of some mercury mixed with oxides on the surface, that would easily peel off. Quick google showed that attemps like that were made and there was basically no contamination seen, but the articles are from the 70'. High toxicity of mercury (and mercury vapor especialy) made people ban mercury thermometers so im pretty sure nobody would allow people to use it as quenching medium. But there are liquid metal baths used in industry, some heat treatment processes require keeping the material in temperatures like 400C (750f) for couple hours to achieve desired result. Liquid tin can be used for that because it makes it possible to reach this temperature by colling it fast enoug. It is not popular method, really expensive and used only for special parts. The contamination is negligable and after finishing grinding and polishing you have pretty much untoched material with no tin impurities.

      @regeman100@regeman1009 ай бұрын
  • When i made a knife at school for a metal working project we used hot water. And then the knives spent 8-12 h in a oven at temperatures starting from like 4-500'c to 200'c, and then cooling down slowly to room temp. That way you get a hard enough blade, but it'll be easier to keep sharp and not be so brittle. Also theres a technique for quenching, if you want a straight blade you have to inject the blade VERY straight, just shoving it in at any angle at all will make the blade bend unpredictably due to cooling faster on one side.

    @Rare_K_@Rare_K_6 ай бұрын
  • I had a friend (he passed away) named Daniel Watson that quenched in liquid nitrogen. The temper process was a little different. You bring your temp up for tempering slowly. It makes for the best blades starting with the right steel.

    @davidrose415@davidrose415 Жыл бұрын
  • 06:30 You forgot to show us the results of the nitrogen quenched blade.

    @thenotsurechannel7630@thenotsurechannel7630 Жыл бұрын
  • By design,some steels are water quench,some oil quench,air quench and even brine quench,so not all steels respond the same.

    @MrOlgrumpy@MrOlgrumpy7 ай бұрын
  • Thanks for the experiment. You helped make sure that the atomic lattice structure of iron is a stubborn thing.

    @o.k.2968@o.k.2968 Жыл бұрын
  • The thing about quenching is that the more rapid the temperature change, the harder the metal gets. Water makes for a harsher quench, but it has lots of issues with oxidation, and sometimes you really just don’t want to harden the blade that much because every steel has a point where it’s too brittle to be useful, and if you harden it anymore past that point, you’re just gonna have to heat treat it back to the point of usability anyway.

    @trentpendygraft339@trentpendygraft339 Жыл бұрын
    • Coming from someone that has watched a KZhead video and is now a quenching expert?

      @billybifocals@billybifocals9 ай бұрын
    • @@billybifocals Great job! You’ve just ✨generalised✨ There’s no need to assume someone’s wrong. If you think they’re spreading misinformation, you could always disprove it

      @one_edgy_son_of_a_bi-@one_edgy_son_of_a_bi-9 ай бұрын
    • @@billybifocalsyou know it better ha? Thats basic material science.

      @hyrize3797@hyrize37979 ай бұрын
    • That's why tempering is every single bit as important as quenching. I was taught to do a figure 8 in the quenching medium so you're not just heating your medium immediately around your workpiece.

      @joesikkspac7904@joesikkspac79049 ай бұрын
    • i m a mechanical engineer and i can confirm that fast quenching results more hard and brittle material like iron. i m not still an expert but the basic knowledge suggests that there are different atoms inside steel (iron and carbon) if you quench it fast there is no time for atoms to distribute homogeneously

      @korhancalin8856@korhancalin88565 ай бұрын
  • ladenfrost effect might be a factor for water and LN2 quenching, which would actually slow down the cooling process. That being said, there are heat treat methods that use water quenching, some use oil, some sand, etc ... and as you mentioned, different steels give better results with different quenching media.

    @squirts1@squirts1 Жыл бұрын
    • It leads to potential stress micro fractures due to the uneven cooling. There can be damage that can only be seen after finishing

      @BouncingTribbles@BouncingTribbles Жыл бұрын
    • So glad to have just learned the term for such an event as I posted an unnecessarily long comment trying to explain it.😑 Do you think that leidenfrost would cause the steel to cool slower in liquid nitrogen than water?

      @deep-freq@deep-freq Жыл бұрын
    • @@deep-freq nitrogen is colder. even the gas coming off of LN2 would be colder than the liquid H2O. heat transfer would be faster until you got near the boiling point of the water, where the leidenfrost effect would stop for water but continue on for LN2. youd get completely different cooling curves i think.

      @jonathanodude6660@jonathanodude6660 Жыл бұрын
  • This was very interesting, but it’s very important to mention that with a high grade steel the heat treat process does a LOT of things at the molecular level beyond just make the steel hard. Grain size, austenitization, distribution of carbon, various kinds of molecular alloying (depending on the steel), all kinds of things that neither a hardness test nor a drop test will show. The recommeded quench temp and medium isn't just pedantry, it optimizes a whole host of microscopic functions that give modern blade steels their extraordinary performance.

    @ryankudebeh2570@ryankudebeh25709 ай бұрын
    • That’s true with basically all steels. That’s why we have things like phase diagrams to assist in the process.

      @thegroundhurts@thegroundhurts5 ай бұрын
  • I was having a jolly time watching this video, then you went and scratched the concrete! my soul wanted to leave my body for a second there.

    @semfronken6176@semfronken61764 күн бұрын
  • Hell yeah Nates back doing crazy experiments nice!

    @cronoce1@cronoce1 Жыл бұрын
    • Grant would have really liked this video.

      @truejim@truejim Жыл бұрын
    • @@truejim we took him for Granted

      @EggplantHarmesan@EggplantHarmesan Жыл бұрын
    • @@EggplantHarmesan Bro💀

      @princ865@princ865 Жыл бұрын
  • 1. I love that the liquid nitrogen was conspicuously absent from the first round of hardness testing 2. We got confirmation that it did, indeed, produce the hardest knife, despite being conspicuously excluded 3. We got an explanation as to why it would perform the best, because of how quickly it cooled the metal (to grossly oversimplify)

    @BarnyTrubble@BarnyTrubble Жыл бұрын
    • The LN knife was at 6:22. We showed two tests of the oil quench, then one with water, then one with LN. I did a poor job showing and saying which was which!

      @NFTI@NFTI Жыл бұрын
    • To stay true to the experiment it would have been nice to see the first 3 blades all undergo hardness testing in the same order. It seemed that because you got an unexpected result from the water quenching you just gave up on that part of the testing which was off-putting.

      @fruitfrube@fruitfrube Жыл бұрын
    • Typically the cooling rate of LN is way lower than the one of simple Water or brine (If I remeber correctly by< a factor of 10)... Yes it has a lower temperature but it does a really bad job at transfering the heat away. If one needs fast quenching (in the lab) tilting the oven and letting the sample fall into a bucket of water is perfect.

      @martinh.3058@martinh.3058 Жыл бұрын
    • @@martinh.3058 ya the rapid evaporating LN serves as an insulator. isn't that called the Leidenfrost effect.

      @nutman411@nutman411 Жыл бұрын
    • @@nutman411 yeah this and the heat conductivity of water is also higher

      @martinh.3058@martinh.3058 Жыл бұрын
  • Would have been fun to put the samples in a toughness tester to see the impact of quench speed on toughness rather than dropping on the floor. It was one of my favorite labs in materials science.

    @normangoldschmidt4018@normangoldschmidt401811 ай бұрын
  • Always enjoyed your videos, Nate. Finding out your were a fellow knifemaker and you make videos about it was great. Getting Larrin on in one of your videos is quite the achievement. His book and website are excellent, plus he's made some very accessible and entertaining videos. I look forward to more from both of you.

    @RobanyBigjobz@RobanyBigjobz Жыл бұрын
  • I would like to see you do a bend test on the 3 quenched knives to see if there's a difference in where they snap. The drop test, I dont believe , proved much. Thanks Nate!

    @daleerhardt1799@daleerhardt1799 Жыл бұрын
    • Needs a temper testing too. Just quenched they will all snap, just depends where and how fast

      @TheSmokingMustache@TheSmokingMustache Жыл бұрын
  • The best part of this video is seeing the staircase in his window well so that animals that fall in can climb back out. Beautiful ❤.

    @Expressoblood@Expressoblood Жыл бұрын
  • Very nice, great video and job well done.

    @JS-ed2hg@JS-ed2hg24 күн бұрын
  • I've been following Knife Steel Nerds for a few years now, so it was a nice surprise having him as a guest expert.

    @davidreem7716@davidreem7716 Жыл бұрын
    • Larrin is awesome. One of the coolest people i know. Hes really good at explaining this stuff.

      @jacksin3323@jacksin3323 Жыл бұрын
  • The sound difference when dropping was interesting. I actually like the same test for end wrenches to find the ones that are of poor quality.

    @kobyavery9408@kobyavery9408 Жыл бұрын
    • Sound point, presumably harder blades/wrenches would vibrate at a higher frequency and more elastic ones would ring longer, which could give a more precise and overall measure of hardness and elasticity, does that ring true with your experience with wrenches?

      @MadScientist512@MadScientist512 Жыл бұрын
  • Would have liked to have heard Larrin Thomas's thoughts on what happened with your Nitrogen quenched steel and maybe why it turned out the way it did and if there is any place for nitrogen quenching or is it just something that wouldn't actually be useful in real world use?

    @Icehawk2k7@Icehawk2k77 ай бұрын
  • Cryogenic tempering, done properly, can strengthen steel as well as improve resistance to wear.

    @williamevans6522@williamevans65228 ай бұрын
  • Next you'll have to try quenching in Ooblek, sand, and a giant hunk of meat.

    @joshbenoit2859@joshbenoit2859 Жыл бұрын
    • @joshbenoit2859, quenching in Ooblek would be quite a challenge since that's a non-Newtonian fluid. Slow, continuous insertion & movement? I think it might be difficult to prevent a layer of insulating char from building up on the blade.

      @fredericapanon207@fredericapanon207 Жыл бұрын
    • This 💡^^^^

      @7-ten@7-ten Жыл бұрын
  • I'm so glad you're doing well on KZhead, TKOR don't know what they've lost

    @brigzy09@brigzy09 Жыл бұрын
  • Should’ve grinded em down a little to get rid of the top surface and then tested em. Won’t they affect the test otherwise or is it negligible?

    @jonathannocon@jonathannocon9 ай бұрын
  • Awesome video! A topic near to my heart. Even having quenched many a piece o'steel muh-damn self, I learned several bits of new (to me) information, at least one of which I'll fo..sho be utilizing, probably on my very next, upcoming quench..

    @jessbarkley3258@jessbarkley32589 ай бұрын
  • It depends entirely on the alloy and what temperature decrease rate curve it needs, Nathan the Greathan!

    @stevealford230@stevealford230 Жыл бұрын
    • This is my understanding too. The key is the RATE of cooling. Cool too fast, and the atoms in the alloy don’t have sufficient time to find a low-energy-state lattice. Cool too slow, and the atoms will keep hopping out of the low-energy-state lattice. Quenching is a Goldilocks process.

      @truejim@truejim Жыл бұрын
  • This was really well shot, and a great experiment. I always wondered why oil was used, so cool topic too.

    @PlasmaChannel@PlasmaChannel Жыл бұрын
  • What's interesting from what I've gleend from my own research of quenching and tempering is the grain structure of the steel and the formation of carbides in knife steels after buying a knife that said cryo on it.

    @danieljcall3811@danieljcall381110 ай бұрын
  • If somebody cares to know the reason why the metal hardens when quenched is because at high temperature the lattice structure of the atoms looses its rigidity and starts moving around slightly. If you cool it down slowly it rearanges mostly perfectly into its ordered lattice structure again and it grows relatively large crystal grains in which state it is more flexible since the lattice can distribute force more evenly. If you cool it down rapidly the lattice structure does not reform correctly and it introduces some defects and also overall smaller grain sizes. More defects and smaller grains (more graind boundaries) inhibit force distribution making the material less fexibla (harder) but also mor prone to breaking. It is therefore purely dependent on the rate of temperature changes and any interaction with the cooling medium does not really contribute to the hardness (it might cause surface oxidation or similar effects though). The process is completely reversible if you reheat the metal and cool it down normaly. I only say this because sometimes people think the oil used during quenching introduces carbon into the metal which is not the case.

    @chidori0117@chidori011711 ай бұрын
  • as someone who has done some minor experiments with quenching all i can say is that, at least on a small scale, the quenching medium barely matters because small things have little mass and a lot of surface area, so they'll cool quickly enough regardless. on a large scale i feel the main advantage of oil is that it doesn't boil off as quickly, leaving you with the ability to keep using the same tub of oil for much longer.

    @windhelmguard5295@windhelmguard5295 Жыл бұрын
  • Best part of the video is the visualisation of the Leidenfrost-effect during the first nitrogen quenching. You can see that metal cools down slowlier despite the extreme cold nitrogen, because of this effect. The effect in short is that the difference in temperature is so high that the liquid immediately boils. Thus there constantly is a layer of nitrogen gas between the metal and the liquid nitrogen which acts as an thermal insulator, slowing down the cooling process. A really cool video, thanks!

    @matthiasbaumbach5393@matthiasbaumbach5393 Жыл бұрын
    • I think the best way is to use oil, just because of the higher boiling point, to prevent the Leidenfrost effect. And if you noticed, at the beginning he uses a narrow metal column filled with oil, apparently in order for it to transfer heat from the oil to the atmosphere. And here something else is interesting: what if this oil column is placed in a container with liquid nitrogen for lower temperatures?

      @Artaazar@Artaazar10 ай бұрын
  • I have no idea how I got here but this was very fascinating.

    @4566Iggy@4566Iggy6 сағат бұрын
  • Good video Thanks I have always wondered how well it would work to make knives out of Inconel

    @Borsia@Borsia6 күн бұрын
  • couldn't click on this vid fast enough

    @congoballs9725@congoballs9725 Жыл бұрын
  • If you bring liquid nitrogen experiments back, I'm so here for it. Been craving these

    @vitamix3676@vitamix3676 Жыл бұрын
  • Dude you had the damn safety glasses on your head when doing the liquid nitrogen quenching.

    @Golemfrost@Golemfrost7 ай бұрын
  • It's all about the carbon center molecules changes to face center carbon molecules via. magnetic to none magnetic when quenched back to magnetic steel thus giving it a harder surface with less ductile strength. But thank you for your video and demonstration.

    @bobsunkees3392@bobsunkees339224 күн бұрын
  • Thank you for continuing Grant Thompson's legacy

    @MockedClown@MockedClown Жыл бұрын
    • I had the same thought. “Now THIS is a TKOR video.”

      @truejim@truejim Жыл бұрын
    • May his soul rest in peace..

      @kai-the-floofer@kai-the-floofer6 ай бұрын
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