5 thoughts on “He Uses The Grill To Make Knives From Railroad Spikes. We Use The Grill To Heat Hot Dogs”
I am thinking it will be too soft a metal for the size of knife. I got one made from a power line metal, which is also soft but sized to hang around the neck.
He is young. He will learn, with time.
Hi Casey- There are high-carbon steel railroad spikes that would make a passable knife.
Then again, we’re talking about using thirty dollars in charcoal and twenty-five dollars in abrasives to make a twenty-dollar knife out of a fifty-cent slug of metal.
I yield to superior RR knowledge. And, it gives me something to bring up with my HS classmate who is a RR engineer.
5 thoughts on “He Uses The Grill To Make Knives From Railroad Spikes. We Use The Grill To Heat Hot Dogs”
I am thinking it will be too soft a metal for the size of knife. I got one made from a power line metal, which is also soft but sized to hang around the neck.
He is young. He will learn, with time.
Hi Casey- There are high-carbon steel railroad spikes that would make a passable knife.
Then again, we’re talking about using thirty dollars in charcoal and twenty-five dollars in abrasives to make a twenty-dollar knife out of a fifty-cent slug of metal.
I yield to superior RR knowledge. And, it gives me something to bring up with my HS classmate who is a RR engineer.
Glasses.
Nothing funny about vitreous humor.
Nicely styled knives, though.
I like the twist handle.
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