Forging a pattern welded viking sword the complete movie.
Viking pattern welded steel.
Earlier iron and steel.
Take this sword in hand and lead you viking warriors to victory and conquest.
When we look at modern industrially produced iron and steel little or no texture is readily apparent without magnification even when the objects have been corroded.
The torsion of different parts and their subsequent union forms the characteristic geometrical pattern and gives the blade an excellent hardness and strength.
Constructed with riveted tang.
Often mistakenly called damascus steel blades forged in this manner often display bands of slightly different patterning along their entire length.
Pattern welding is the practice in sword and knife making of forming a blade of several metal pieces of differing composition that are forge welded together and twisted and manipulated to form a pattern.
The blades were pattern welded a method of sword making where iron and steel were forge welded together.
These bands can be highlighted for.
Together with weapons such as the battle axe and the spear the sword was one of the most useful offensive tools for a viking warrior.
Pattern welded steel blade often called damascus steel made with an antique technique which welds different layers of steel by the forge process.
The blade of this sword is forged from a blend of 1095 15n20 steel and tempered to create this gorgeous pattern welded damascus steel you see here.
Viking swords were typically meant for single handed use with the other hand holding a shield.
The faces of the blade are often flat and the central flat portion is pattern welded with the edges and tip being of non patterned steel.
Mechanical damascus steel pattern welded steel structures from twisted piled rods as seen in a yataghan and a viking sword.