RUSTY CHAIN MAIL – Knights Templar Dagger | Forged in Fire (Season 4)



Four brave smiths are thrown for a loop when they must forge together rusty chain mail and high quality steel to produce Knights Templar Crusader Daggers in Round 1. See more in this clip from Season 4, Episode 22, “Knights Templar.”

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20 thoughts on “RUSTY CHAIN MAIL – Knights Templar Dagger | Forged in Fire (Season 4)”

  1. “Among the charges preferred against the Order of the Knights of Templar, for which Jacques de Molay suffered martyrdom, was that of worshiping an idol or image called Baphomet or Baphometus…It has been suggested that Baphomet is none other than the Ancient of Days, or Creator…More cannot be said here without improperly revealing what we are bound to hele, conceal and never reveal.”

    Kenneth R. H. Mackenzie, 33° Freemason
    The Royal Masonic Cyclopaedia, [p. 67]

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  2. Definitely going enjoy the uploads today 👌🤌👍🔨🔥🔥🔥🗡️🗡️⚒️🔪💯…. Long compilation video on deck 😉👌💯🔪⚒️🗡️🔥🔥🔥🔥⚒️⚒️🔪🔥🤌

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  3. Lol…thats an English dagger, not a knights templars. Ya'll are so far off the mark…historians must have fed you loads of malarkey for Ya'll to think that english horseshit was a templars daggers, lol.

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  4. Put that rusted chainmail in a canister with a layer of paper all around. That paper will capture the oxygen from the rust. It should also prevent the steel from binding to the canister in a way similar to whiteout. Some aluminium foil may also do the trick.

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  5. The most durable blade for this challenge is to forge-weld a billet of mild steel chainmail and to use an inlay technique to create the core structure. The core structure will not be exposed. Time is limited to three hours, so time management is key.

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  6. 6:15 That's a weird remark i almost don't agree with, and the fact that it's coming from Mr. Baker himself who is a historical weapons' recreation specialist…An armor penetrating dagger is supposed to penetrate armor, chopping or slashing is not its primary purpose. A blade with a very acute tip punctures better than a blade with a more obtuse tip angle. I even checked some historical examples and the other blades are closer to that shape than this one. No hate to David Baker in any way.
    Edit: Well nevermind turns out there are examples of templar daggers with that kind of tip too, but won't they be less effective at penetrating armor?

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