Corneel":29nmlfvc said:A big thing in tool making is the grain size. The Japanese white paper steel is great stuff with a very fine grain size. But overheat it a couple of times and you get a biscuit like substance with a grain you can see with your naked eye! It is the skill of the smith that makes the tool, the right forging temperature, not too hot not too cold, working swiftly to avoid unnessary scaling etc. Then comes the heat treatment that could easilly wipe out all skilled forging work if done incorrectly, but when done with care it could decrease the grain size even further.
I think we can admire the skill of the Japanese blacksmiths just as well without mytical hokey pokey. Making a laminated blade from a very simple high carbon steel at very high hardness levels is a quite a feat!
I think the skill itself is what serious users are after, not any of the other stuff. Pine charcoal probably doesn't do much of anything compared to gas (and especially not good temperature regulation), but it suggests some attention to detail. (There may be something about it preventing decarb, I don't know).
The real trick is that white 1 has a really narrow temperature range, and it takes some skill to consistently make great tools.
Making "good" ones doesn't require anything other than prelaminated material and good process. I'd imagine that the process could be tightened well enough to do white 1 well, too, but don't know as there probably isn't much of a market for the risk. Of course, mass produced goods tend to look mass produced, and that's a bit offputting in the world of japanese tools. The kind of crisp subtle finish isn't on mass produced tools.
I've never heard the one about the water, just the narrow temperature range that white 1 has.