Antique Mccormick
Antique Mccormick

Me gustaría una valoración de una primera edición de 1905 de los Cuentos de misterio e imaginación de Edgar Allan Poe.?
Ilustrado por ADMcCormick. Impreso por Ballantyne y Hanson Edinburg Co. de Londres. Impreso en papel antiguo Crema-Vergé.
Es sólo un libro antiguo y de ninguna manera una primera edición. Poe murió en 1849 así que las posibilidades de escribir un libro 56 años más tarde son bastante escasas.
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ihc la, mccormick la/lb , antique stationary engine $500.00 |
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Antique Handcrank McCormick Deering 1900′s Cream Separator Accessories Model 252 $350.00 |
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Antique McCormick Deering Oat Binder Parts or Rebuilder $300.00 |
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Antique McCormick Derring Sickle Blade Bar Sharpener $85.00 |
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Antique McCormick Deering Farm Implement Hay Bailer Farmall Tractor Primitive $55.00 |
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Antique 1924 International Harvester Repair Parts Catalogue 4 McCormick Deering $29.95 |
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Antique Cast Iron McCormick Tractor Tool Box Door / Cover, Vintage Name Plate $19.00 |
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Antique OVERHAULING McCormick-Deering FARMALL tractor BOOK not dated OLD collect $9.95 |
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Antique McCormick tractor tool box $7.99 |
Antique Mccormick
Damascus Steel â the High Tech Weapon of the 12th Century
Damascus Steel is a broad category of metallurgical techniques used to make higher technology knives and sword blades in the 12th through 18th centuries. Prior to the Bessemer process which allows steel to be made in large quantities with exact control over the amount of carbon in the mix, steel was made in an artisanal method – it was made in small batches, and making a batch large enough to make a sword was a technical challenge.
Steel is iron with carbon impurities; the best time to mix in the carbon impurities is when the steel is hot. The archetypal image of a blacksmith striking sparks from a red hot steel blade that we see in movies and popular culture stems from needing to distribute the carbon (from coke or charcoal) through the blade. You’d hammer the steel while it’s glowing hot, turn the blade over, hammer it again, and reheat. The aim of doing this was to make sure that the carbon granules were broken to the right size in the alloy. (Modern steel making allows much greater precision than merely hammering the nodules out). The more carbon there is in the steel, the harder it is, and the more rigid the steel is.
Damascus steel, in spite of the mythologies that have built up around it, was simply a technique of taking high carbon steel ingots (usually “wootz” steel imported from India), hammering or drawing them flat, and then putting a layer of charcoal over them, then a layer of higher nickel alloy steel over it (nickel keeps steel flexible), then hammering them together, often times trying to fold the steel back so that there’s a pattern of high carbon steel (providing rigidity) and softer nickel steel (maintaining flexibility and the softness needed to sharpen the weapon with period tools).
Damascus steel shows a distinctive pattern – the high carbon steel is darker than the nickel steel, and there’s a pattern of cells that can look almost like snakeskin or running water through the blade, as the hot blade is quenches in pickling brine. (This brine will tarnish the high carbon steel before the nickel steel). Similar patterns can be found in pattern-welded steel swords from Northern Europe and the “folded steel” swords of the Japanese, both of which have been mythologized (as has Damascus steel) into weapons that can cut rock, bodies and machine gun barrels.
Damascus steel fell out of fashion for two reasons. The first is that it’s incredibly labor intensive to make, and the second was that with the Bessemer process, modern steelmaking allowed for comparable steels at a fraction of the cost. Indeed, the leaf springs in a typical automobile or light truck can be ground down to make better swords than ever existed in antiquity in terms of quality and ability to hold an edge.
To look at a selection of Damascus Steel knife blades visit our Damascus Steel Pocket Knives page.
About the Author
Kirk McCormick has over 20 years experience in law enforcement and has enjoyed the outdoors for over 40 years. He writes on a variety of knife related topics. You can contact him through: www.NorthAmericanKnives.com; www.SwissArmyKnifeMall.com or www.PocketKnivesMall.com
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MCCORMICK,FERGUS: FERGUS MCCORMICK $11.12 MCCORMICK,FERGUS: FERGUS MCCORMICK |
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The McCormick’s O.K. $59.99 The McCormick’s O.K. – Wall Decal |
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Hardcastle and McCormick $7.99 Hardcastle and McCormick – Photo |
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The McCormick Daisy $19.99 The McCormick Daisy – Premium Poster |
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The Record of the McCormick $19.99 The Record of the McCormick – Premium Poster |
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Cyrus Mccormick $34.99 Cyrus Mccormick – Giclee Print |
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MCCORMICK BROTHERS: SOMEWHERE IN TIME $11.08 MCCORMICK BROTHERS: SOMEWHERE IN TIME |
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MCCORMICK,KEVIN: SOLO GUITAR $19 MCCORMICK,KEVIN: SOLO GUITAR |
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MCCORMICK,KEVIN: WITH THE COMING OF EVEN $14.03 MCCORMICK,KEVIN: WITH THE COMING OF EVEN |
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MCCORMICK,KEVIN: SONGS OF THE MARTIN $15.11 MCCORMICK,KEVIN: SONGS OF THE MARTIN |
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The McCormick Improved Dropper $19.99 The McCormick Improved Dropper – Premium Poster |
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McCormick Machines Agricoles $59.99 McCormick Machines Agricoles – Wall Decal |
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McCormick: The Home Makers $59.99 McCormick: The Home Makers – Wall Decal |
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The McCormick Imperial at Work $59.99 The McCormick Imperial at Work – Wall Decal |
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McCormick: Wilhelm Engelhardt $19.99 McCormick: Wilhelm Engelhardt – Premium Poster |
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Cyrus Hall Mccormick $39.99 Cyrus Hall Mccormick – Photographic Print |
mccormick-Deering antique engine