Welding razor blades together, with a MIG

   / Welding razor blades together, with a MIG #21  
An older friend of mine worked just out of high school in a welding shop. He had a pair of foil gum wrappers that he heli-arc welded together
 
   / Welding razor blades together, with a MIG #22  
An older friend of mine worked just out of high school in a welding shop. He had a pair of foil gum wrappers that he heli-arc welded together

Forget about the tigging. I'd have a hard enough time just aligning the wrappers..:(

Terry
 
   / Welding razor blades together, with a MIG #23  
The razor blade thing (for me) goes back 35+ years to high school along with the aluminum can stacking. My shop teacher showed us how and had us give it a try and no one could do it then. Course, we couldn't do anything much but burn things then. He was showing off and we all thought he was something.
 
   / Welding razor blades together, with a MIG #24  
When I was in welding school it was a torch and snuff cans. ;)
 
   / Welding razor blades together, with a MIG #25  
I always wondered if chain mail links should be welded, or riveted?
 
   / Welding razor blades together, with a MIG #26  
I always wondered if chain mail links should be welded, or riveted?

traditionally they were riveted. Flattened on the ends. overlapped, and punched while hot, then riveted.
 
   / Welding razor blades together, with a MIG #27  
As a retired engineer from The Gillette Company, I can tell you a "real" razor blade is a mere 0.003 thick. We weld each blade to its blade support in 13 places using a laser and it's naturally an automated process....

Sensor: 0.003
Mach 3: 0.003
Fusion: 0.003
Pro-Glide: 0.003
 
   / Welding razor blades together, with a MIG #28  
I always wondered if chain mail links should be welded, or riveted?

When my wife made my shirt she did a tighter weave with stainless. She closed the links so the ends butted together, but didn't secure them with anything but natural tension. Looks good & seems pretty strong.
 
   / Welding razor blades together, with a MIG #29  
When my wife made my shirt she did a tighter weave with stainless. She closed the links so the ends butted together, but didn't secure them with anything but natural tension. Looks good & seems pretty strong.

They are strong enough to wear, and for looks.. BUT not strong enough to really act as armor to help stop sword blows. They will open up and fail. The originals were all riveted. As hard as that is to do, and as long as that takes.
 
   / Welding razor blades together, with a MIG #30  
They are strong enough to wear, and for looks.. BUT not strong enough to really act as armor to help stop sword blows. They will open up and fail. The originals were all riveted. As hard as that is to do, and as long as that takes.

I think I have heard of some people TIGing them. Would be easy, if your machine has a spot timer.
 

Tractor & Equipment Auctions

20 ft. Shipping Container (A53117)
20 ft. Shipping...
2009 Dodge Grand Caravan Passenger Van (A53117)
2009 Dodge Grand...
2001 HAULMARK ELITE II 8' X 24' CARGO TRAILER (A51247)
2001 HAULMARK...
6 Yard Commercial Dumpster (A51691)
6 Yard Commercial...
2019 Altec DC1317 (A50123)
2019 Altec DC1317...
2015 FREIGHTLINER M2 26FT NON CDL BOX TRUCK (A53426)
2015 FREIGHTLINER...
 
Top