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Oda Nabunaga Practical Functional Full Tang Katana Sword. The Hand Made Sword is full-tang and can be fully disassembled. The sword is made with high temper carbon steel that can cut steel wire without chipping. The blade was created by combining two pieces of steel with different hardiness into one solid piece (iron wrap process) and differentially tempering it until desired hardiness has been achieved.
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Sword Specs:
Overall Length: 40"
Blade Length: 28.5"
Blade Material: Carbon Steel
Full Tang
Scabbard: Wood With Black Finish and Engraving
Comes With Free Stand and Sword Bag
HISTORY
(1534-1582) Oda Nabunaga
Born in the family of a local war lord in 1534 near Nagaga, he feinged foolish when he was young to distract other. After having eliminating another warlord, Imagawa Yoshimoto who threatened him from the east, by a surprise attack, Nobonaga went to Kyoto to give orders to others in the name Shogun and Emperor. After many successful battles, he was assassinated by his deputy, Akeshi Mtuhide, in 1582 on the road to go the western Japan.
Carbon Steel
Carbon steel, also called plain carbon steel, is a metal alloy,
a combination of two elements, iron and carbon, where other elements are present in quantities too small
to affect the properties. The only other alloying elements allowed in plain-carbon steel are
manganese (1.65% max), silicon (0.60% max), and copper (0.60% max). Steel with a low carbon content has
the same properties as iron, soft but easily formed. As carbon content rises the metal becomes harder and
stronger but less ductile and more difficult to weld. Higher carbon content lowers steel's melting point and
its temperature resistance in general.
* Mild (low carbon) steel: approximately 0.05–0.29% carbon content[1] (e.g. AISI 1018 steel). Mild steel has a relatively low tensile strength, but it is cheap and malleable; surface hardness can be increased through carburizing.[2]
* Medium carbon steel: approximately 0.30–0.59% carbon content[1](e.g. AISI 1040 steel). Balances ductility and strength and has good wear resistance; used for large parts, forging and automotive components.[3]
* High carbon steel: approximately 0.6–0.99% carbon content [1]. Very strong, used for springs and high-strength wires.[4]
* Ultra-high carbon steel: approximately 1.0–2.0% carbon content [1]. Steels that can be tempered to great hardness. Used for special purposes like (non-industrial-purpose) knives, axles or punches. Most steels with more than 1.2% carbon content are made using powder metallurgy and usually fall in the category of high alloy carbon steels. |
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| This product was added to our catalog on Sunday 07 October, 2007. |
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