I went to a local foundry the other day, and some people were melting down a blend of sand to make obsidian.
This could be mass-produced, cast into the form of knives, and sharpened to make very sharp blades.
You could cut through a roast rather quickly with these knives, but would have to deal with the occasional chip of sharp glass.-- discontinuuity, Oct 09 2005 Kyocera Ceramic Knives http://www.metrokit...ceramic-knives.htmlSorta the modern-day equivalent of Obsidian Cutlery. See the Kyotop HIP blades (at bottom of page) if black is essential to your obsidian obsession. [jurist, Oct 09 2005] Kyocera Classic 6" Serrated Edge Knife http://www.metrokit...il&search=KJ-KC-250All of the utility; none of the chips. [jurist, Oct 09 2005] Neolithic Obsidian Blades http://catal.arch.c..._rep93/ar93_03.html [jonthegeologist, Oct 09 2005] Does glass make a better scalpel? http://www.finescie...nives/10110-01.htmlIt's not clear. [2 fries shy of a happy meal, Oct 09 2005] Pictures of obsidian tools http://images.googl...+Search&sa=N&tab=wi... Happy to assist, [dentworth] [jonthegeologist, Oct 09 2005] I was thinking of a serrated edge made by cleaving off chips with a hammer.-- discontinuuity, Oct 09 2005 Obsidian is not that easy to "handle". It's beautiful, though. My dad makes sculptures out of it and they are sold throughtout my country.
I don't think anybody - at least in my country, will be interested in buying obsidian cutlery. The material should be saved for art.-- Pericles, Oct 09 2005 When I was a kid, my barber taught me some flint-knapping one summer. I've never had an opportunity to use it, and would dearly love to get my hands on some good pieces of obsidian. Particularly, if mass produced, I wouldn't feel too guilty about ruining a chunk. I think I would like a set of pre-made knives, along with a few blanks I could customize.
// cleaving off chips with a hammer // The knapper I learned to use was actually a 10-penny nail, stuck in a wooden handle. One side of the nail's head was filed off, the other bent up over the end of the nail. I could never get a chip off with the more authentic deer-antler knapper.-- lurch, Oct 09 2005 It could be argued that this has been baked for thousands of years - we've had obsidian blades/knives for some time.-- jonthegeologist, Oct 09 2005 I like this idea, but stainless steel doesn't chip, so why bother, hence the halfbaked angle, and [jon], no pictures? I like pictures.-- dentworth, Oct 09 2005 [Lurch], you can knap normal glass too, not just obsidian. I'v heard it has more predictable seperation paths than flint too.
As to chips breaking off in the meat (if that's a valid fear), perhaps one could try making the synthetic obsidain with a metal-fabric core.-- my-nep, Oct 09 2005 random, halfbakery