"out of context" ?? i qouted you IN FULL declaring the following:
katanas never get dull False
katanas have special PLATING that makes them self-sharpening False
Katanas have microscopic shark tooth formations in the blades False
katanas are made by PLATING different metals together False
I said in the beginning, and several times throughout this argument, the blade I'm speaking of may not be a Katana, you
dense fuck. /outofcontext
there are blades that dont get dull False
No that statement is true. I've already supported it with NASA engineering documents. Your word of mouth DOES NOT trump that, as much as you would like to believe.
chipping and erosion are a different function from dulling False
You were the one who said this, I even posted the EXACT quote, marked with RED LETTERING, showing that YOU in fact don't understand how material failure works.
blades dont get dull unless they are in contact with a harder material than the tool False
Ah the subject of the argument! Again, IN THE CONTEXT, you halfwit, a well made sword would last LONGER THAN A LIFETIME of slicing zombies, before it needs to be sharpened.
Thanks for showing your fallacy. Thanks for showing your arrogance. Thanks for showing you are trying to argue, just to argue. Thanks again for taking me out of context, as you said you hadn't in the very first statement of this post.
your speaking in a different context, a context which is contra to reality. True
The mother fuckin IRONY
and now blades and light bulbs only need replacement because the Lightbulb/Razor/sawblade conspiracy has planned it that way...
Who said this? I stated FACT. I stated the fact that manufacturing companies ENGINEER their products to fail in a given amount of time. Again, I supported that claim with FACT. The FACT that light bulbs with thick filament can last longer than a lifetime.
"the old thick filament edison bulbs DO last a long time, true (current record is a bulb in a firestation in california, at 110+ years), but they also require much more power and deliver a dimmer orange light that is far inferior to the thin filament bulbs."
<- Thanks for supporting my factual claim that you argued against. lol....
straight razors (not cheap by any stretch of the imagination) also require sharpening. if you could make a razor that never needs sharpening, barbers and hairstylists would beat a path to your door. nice try. logic beats you down like a chump again.
So your logic is that because a barber who doesn't own a well engineered piece of equipment, it cannot exist. Got it! Good logic there Doc! I guess because we haven't made public the cure for certain diseases, that they cannot possibly exist! Never have, never will! I guess the time of innovation and new creation is OVER! Cuz if it aint existing here and now, it aint existing ever!
i have a titanium bladed pocketknife and guess what, it needs sharpening occasionally too.
The type of alloy has VERY LITTLE to do with the HARDNESS of the material, when speaking of super hard materials, as I've stated from the beginning. The fact that you keep arguing apples to blue semis is comical. Keep talking about titanium like that name means SUPER HARD, indestructible. I never said titanium wouldn't dull, why are you insisting such? Being hypocritical? Acting dumb? Surely
Again, because you know absolutely NOTHING about material science, let me run it through for you one mo time:
Hardening:
1. Place alloy in oven that has reached an equilibrium of 1500F.
2. Allow part to reach equilibrium, and then sit for 30min
3. Now, warm oil quench the part so that we raise the hardness to the 40RCs.
4. Repeat step 1.
5. Allow only the case of the part to get hot, then sit for about 15min.
6. Cold water quench obtaining a case of 55ishRC.
stone/tile saws, industrial timber saws,, concrete saws, and metal saws (rotary band or reciprocating) all dull with use. i hav enever even heard of a saw that wears down by spitting teeth at the operator. i cannot even imagine such a saw being anything but a liability. saws can lose teeth, but when they do the blade is ALWAYS replaced in any professioaal or industrial shop, never used till it just wont cut no more, since those toothless sections will snag drag tear bind or break the saw injure the operator, and waste materials. only home hobbyists would use a saw with missing teeth.
You have no idea how industrial, metal saws work. They lose teeth as a result of cutting hard metals. It happens, period.
Why don't you go run the saws at Honeywell, tell those machinist that you are better and more qualified, and that only morons use blades missing teeth.
This really is the last time I reply to you, because you've proven to act like a arrogant child in this debate. Thanks for demonstrating that you will argue against reputable sources like NASA. You aren't even arguing against me, you are arguing against science, and I've given you every opportunity to read and reevaluate your laymans knowledge of material science.
Make some gears out of glass (RC70ish) and see if they dull or shatter. Make a glass sword and go chop zombies, tell me if it chips and/or shatters, or if it dulls. Knives, swords, gears, etc, are all made soft purposely so they can have the chance and ability to dull. If it is too hard, the material fractures without notice, aka chipping and or shattering, not dulling. Even your graphic of the sword fabrication depicts such. They then case harden the material so that it can obtain dull-resistant/deformation-resistant properties. But they don't case harden to the point where it inherently causes chipping/shattering.
/sizereduced