Re: Corrosion Reports
Posted: Tue Jan 09, 2024 7:56 am
Thanks for sharing. Could you provide more details? Did it get wet or experience heavy perspiration? I'm curious about the conditions that lead to rusting the liners.
Thanks for sharing. Could you provide more details? Did it get wet or experience heavy perspiration? I'm curious about the conditions that lead to rusting the liners.
I live in a part of the world that gets hot at times and I think the corrosion is mainly from sweat. I do use a food safe Camelia oil on my tool steel blades but it seems that it hasn't penetrated into the pivot as much as I thought. This knife has accompanied me on some really hot work field trips where I am doing long days and out camping in remote areas for 2-3 weeks at a time and maintenance can get a bit lax. These are the times when I
Thanks a lot! I think Bar Keepers Friend or FLITZ will easily remove it.R100 wrote: ↑Tue Jan 09, 2024 1:29 pmI live in a part of the world that gets hot at times and I think the corrosion is mainly from sweat. I do use a food safe Camelia oil on my tool steel blades but it seems that it hasn't penetrated into the pivot as much as I thought. This knife has accompanied me on some really hot work field trips where I am doing long days and out camping in remote areas for 2-3 weeks at a time and maintenance can get a bit lax. These are the times when I
have really noticed the corrosion.
I also use my folders for food prep. I wipe them down immediately and am careful to avoid getting water in the pivots but this is probably also a source of corrosion.
Dan
I actually did use Bar Keepers Friend and it worked perfectly. I also did a little bit of polishing to reduce the surface area before I oiled the liners and reassembled the knife with its new scales. Maybe that will slow things down.
I didn't imply that the FRN isn't durable. I have confidence in my Pac Salts and linerless Matriarch, which I consider as reliable as the Endura 4 or Matriarch 2. The addition of liners in the fourth generation of Delica and Endura aims to enhance the knife's strength IMO. So simply reverting to linerless construction with the same material might not be justified…R100 wrote: ↑Wed Jan 10, 2024 1:55 amI actually did use Bar Keepers Friend and it worked perfectly. I also did a little bit of polishing to reduce the surface area before I oiled the liners and reassembled the knife with its new scales. Maybe that will slow things down.
FRN is actually extremely durable and strong. I would love a K390 Stretch 2 XL and think it would be much more corrosion resistant than a linered model like the Endura. The VG10 model I have is a really solid knife and I have a SE Salt version on the way which I intend to give some heavy use.
Dan
Technically speaking when there are two dissimilar metals in contact with each other, the more reactive one will corrode first. Stainless steel is lower on the galvanic series than carbon steel meaning that in a corrosion cell made from the these two metals, carbon steel should corrode first.JSumm wrote: ↑Tue Jan 09, 2024 5:26 pmI think Vamais is right. I've also had corrosion on my Sekis liners. It seems to start out in the cutouts towards the corners. Just enough to trap moisture and enough exposure for oxygen. As Vivi brought up, I have not seen any on black coated liners. I don't think the liners are DLC coated, rather painted. Painted is probably better since it would make sense it is a less porous coating. Since they are internal liners, it doesn't get scratched like a painted clip.
#paintalllinersandleavethetoolsteal.
Check the post right before mine. This was concerning some of the hidden nooks where water can reside a bit longer in the cutouts of the skelonitized liners. This is not where the liners meet the blade. I have typically seen it at the corners meeting the FRN.Mat_ski wrote: ↑Tue Feb 20, 2024 8:23 pmTechnically speaking when there are two dissimilar metals in contact with each other, the more reactive one will corrode first. Stainless steel is lower on the galvanic series than carbon steel meaning that in a corrosion cell made from the these two metals, carbon steel should corrode first.JSumm wrote: ↑Tue Jan 09, 2024 5:26 pmI think Vamais is right. I've also had corrosion on my Sekis liners. It seems to start out in the cutouts towards the corners. Just enough to trap moisture and enough exposure for oxygen. As Vivi brought up, I have not seen any on black coated liners. I don't think the liners are DLC coated, rather painted. Painted is probably better since it would make sense it is a less porous coating. Since they are internal liners, it doesn't get scratched like a painted clip.
#paintalllinersandleavethetoolsteal.
However, high alloy tool steels may not be aware of this ‘rule’ and I have no clue where does k390 sit in the galvanic series relative to whatever the liner is made of.
This is it right here. This is why I've never considered adding liners to the FRN models an upgrade. I've always had more issues with corrosion on liners than I have on blades.
I've thought about that as well, and I have to imagine there's a reason why it hasn't been done. I wish they'd at least just go back to solid FRN on the Salt series if nothing else.TimButterfield wrote: ↑Thu Feb 22, 2024 7:06 amIf you want the strength of a liner, but without the corrosion risk, perhaps the liner could be embedded within the FRN.
if they did that, there would be no way to reach corrosion and it would still form because of the holes for the screws. it would probably be even worse too because there would be no way to dry everything out.StuntZombie wrote: ↑Thu Feb 22, 2024 11:10 amI've thought about that as well, and I have to imagine there's a reason why it hasn't been done. I wish they'd at least just go back to solid FRN on the Salt series if nothing else.TimButterfield wrote: ↑Thu Feb 22, 2024 7:06 amIf you want the strength of a liner, but without the corrosion risk, perhaps the liner could be embedded within the FRN.
If not an embedded liner, perhaps a coated liner would do better. DLC may be too expensive, but some other less expensive coating might work. Of course, a screw hole may still wear the coating off, but it would at least help limit it to just those spots.ladybug93 wrote: ↑Thu Feb 22, 2024 1:27 pmif they did that, there would be no way to reach corrosion and it would still form because of the holes for the screws. it would probably be even worse too because there would be no way to dry everything out.StuntZombie wrote: ↑Thu Feb 22, 2024 11:10 amI've thought about that as well, and I have to imagine there's a reason why it hasn't been done. I wish they'd at least just go back to solid FRN on the Salt series if nothing else.TimButterfield wrote: ↑Thu Feb 22, 2024 7:06 amIf you want the strength of a liner, but without the corrosion risk, perhaps the liner could be embedded within the FRN.
It wouldn't be a problem if the liners were entirely encapsulated by the FRN. And the threaded inserts would be completely separate from the liners.ladybug93 wrote: ↑Thu Feb 22, 2024 1:27 pmif they did that, there would be no way to reach corrosion and it would still form because of the holes for the screws. it would probably be even worse too because there would be no way to dry everything out.StuntZombie wrote: ↑Thu Feb 22, 2024 11:10 amI've thought about that as well, and I have to imagine there's a reason why it hasn't been done. I wish they'd at least just go back to solid FRN on the Salt series if nothing else.TimButterfield wrote: ↑Thu Feb 22, 2024 7:06 amIf you want the strength of a liner, but without the corrosion risk, perhaps the liner could be embedded within the FRN.
2 more years of the same and other than touch ups, haven't tried to clean it up since.abbazaba wrote: ↑Wed Apr 27, 2022 9:22 pmAs an experiment, my S110v Manix LW has been my swim shorts knife for years of yard work followed by soaking in the pool, and despite straight up abuse the blade looks great. I think this was the 4th year in a row it's lived in my swim shorts all summer, remaining wet for hours/days in the shorts pocket hung up after swimming. We own a pool and a hot tub so its fully submerged and left wet almost every day during the summer. The spring and ball are fine (btw), but the backspacer is covered in surface rust. I hope Magnacut will do as well or better because S110v isn't my favorite edge, but its been better than LC200n and H1 in this specific situation for me. Still hoping for that Manix2 LW Salt!
Pics of S110v after 4 years of swimming in the pool/hot tub, left in wet shorts after:
After 30-60 seconds of fingernail/thumb rub:
Inside was a little more difficult, so I used a flat head to get in there, again only 30-60 second attempt:
Before:
After:
FWIW, my 15dps reprofile held up as well as rest of the blade, with minor touch ups through out. S110v loses it's fine edge pretty quickly IME, but it does continue to cut for a long time... I just prefer a tool steel type edge (M4, K390). Hoping Magnacut lives up to the hype!