Has anyone made a sword from blood?

2,250 grams of workable iron, factoring for the ratio of impurities, means we'll need 9,407.25 grams of raw material — of blood-iron sand — to start. At 4 grams per person, you'd need at least 2,352 completely drained donors to make a iron longsword out of blood.
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Do swords get stronger with blood?

Swords were tempered in urine or blood -- FALSE

The steels smelted in Medieval Europe required either clean water or oil for quenching. Urine or blood would not allow a blade to temper properly.
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Can blood rust a sword?

Well - blood is highly corrossive to steel and will cause it to rust in record time if not wiped off completely and the sword reoiled.. Apparently it is quite hard to get off completely, many old antique swords that have seen useage have a dark stain from it...
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How many people would it take to forge a sword from blood?

Turns out, you can math that. So. High fantasy math has made it clear that you need to kill at least 225 un-friends before you get such a fancifully morbid weapon. But 400 is probably the average for a big ol' blade.
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How many gallons of blood would it take to make a sword?

Assuming there are 10 pints of blood in your body, and you can replace a pint every 16 weeks (as recommended by the uk nhs). You need 3,590 pints to make a sword. So, 3,590 men could give blood and forge one sword.
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Making Swords from Blood: How Many People Would it Take?



How many human bodies does it take to make a sword?

That puts you at 64,749.9 grams of blood-iron sand, or a genocidal 16,188 doomed souls to create a single steel blade. To put that in perspective, you're looking at killing roughly half as many people as the bubonic plague did in 1625 London. Brutal.
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Can you make a sword out of obsidian?

Natural obsidian is a pretty terrible substance to make a durable weapon with, but there are other "obsidian like" materials that could work. "Obsidian like" being glass with impurities...
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Can you make a sword out of a meteorite?

The meteorites are smashed up, placed in stainless steel crucibles, and heated until the meteorites turn molten. The metal is then forged into ingots which are stacked and drawn out into a sword. No additional steel is added.
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Did Vikings use steel or iron?

Viking blacksmiths used a new technique, combining pure iron for the middle of the blade and steel along the edges. The steel often contained just a few, flat pieces of slag, indicating that it had been worked over a longer time than the pure iron.
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How did samurai clean the blood off their swords?

Chiburui (血振るい), also called chiburi, is the process by which one symbolically removes blood from a sword blade. The term chiburui can thus be translated as "shaking off the blood". In the Japanese martial art of iaidō, this is done before nōtō or placing the blade back into the scabbard (known as saya).
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Do old swords bleed?

Even 2,000 years old, it bleeds. And it smells like a steak cooking, like cooked meat. I've encountered this before with Japanese swords from World War II. If there's blood on the sword and you start polishing it, the sword bleeds.
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Why do people wipe blood off their swords?

It's called chiburui in Real Life, as there's enough blood on the sword, it'll rust faster, but it was more common to clean the sword on a convenient piece of cloth (such as that worn by the dead enemy). Advertisement: Other liquids (such as water or oil) don't usually count, unless there's some symbolism to it.
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How long does it take to make a sword today?

A cheap sword could take a day or two to make, while a master worked Pattern Welded sword could take a week or more to make. In addition to just the blade itself, a true work of art weapon would have expensive pommel made with a work of art scabbard which combine could take a month or even longer at times.
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Did katanas have blood groove?

The most common type of blood groove used in the Japanese katana is the bo-hi, which is a narrow indention that runs the length of the blade. But there are several other types of blood grooves used by Japanese swordsmiths.
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How much does it cost to make a sword?

If you plan to forge your own sword at home, you may need to build out a safe place to have a forge, anvil, and your other bladesmithing tools. The cost to build out your own smithy at home can range between $500 to $5,000, depending on the equipment and materials you choose to work with.
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Would a diamond sword work?

While it may be possible to create a sword shaped object from diamond it is simply too brittle to be used effectively. On a side note a sword of pure carbon would also lack the mass to be effective against a similar sized steel blade.
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Do meteorites contain diamonds?

Diamonds are rare and precious, known to form from carbon under the extreme temperatures and pressures within the Earth's mantle over the course of billions of years. They are also found in some meteorites.
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What is Sokka's sword made of?

Sokka's sword was a weapon crafted by the young Water Tribe warrior during his swordsmanship training with Piandao. It was forged using ore from a recently fallen meteorite, and Sokka later referred to it affectionately as his "space sword" due to the origin of its material.
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What is a 9 ring sword?

9 Ring broadsword (Jiu Huan Dao), made of a metal alloy, recommended for training, competition and exhibitions. This broadsword is a traditional and popular Chinese weapon originated from the Qing dynasty, used to block and trap the attack of the swords of the enemies amongst the rings and to cause distraction.
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What is iron sword?

Early Iron Age swords were significantly different from later steel swords. They were work-hardened, rather than quench-hardened, which made them about the same or only slightly better in terms of strength and hardness to earlier bronze swords. This meant that they could still be bent out of shape during use.
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Is silver a good metal for a sword?

There is no way to make a silver sword stand up in any way to a steel sword, barring the revocation of the laws of physics. The hardness of silver lies somewhere between lead and copper, which makes it good for jewelry but unusable for swords.
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Is obsidian sharper than diamond?

Surprisingly, the edge of a piece of obsidian is superior to that of a surgeon's steel scalpel. It is 3 times sharper than diamond and between 500-1000 times sharper than a razor or a surgeon's steel blade resulting in easier incisions and fewer microscopic ragged tissue cuts.
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Can obsidian melt in lava?

Obsidian is literally, cool lava. Netherite gear already has the properties to not burn in lava, so why not make obsidian immune as well? It's just frustrating to mine obsidian for a relatively long time and half of it falls to the lower layer of lava and ends up burning.
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Can obsidian cut atoms?

Since obsidian will fracture down to a single atom, it is claimed to have a cutting edge five hundred times sharper than the sharpest steel blade, and under a high magnification microscope an obsidian blade still appears smooth, whereas a steel blade has a saw like edge.
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