Primitive Archer

Main Discussion Area => Flintknapping => Topic started by: iowabow on May 06, 2011, 08:40:31 am

Title: pressure flaking question
Post by: iowabow on May 06, 2011, 08:40:31 am
I noticed with the new material I have been working that the copper size make a difference. If I work a point with the same large dia copper tool the platform starts to have a small step in the valley of the flake.  The stress must be to great for the small platform. My question is when should I switch to the smaller tools.  What sign am I looking for.
Title: Re: pressure flaking question
Post by: Tower on May 06, 2011, 10:05:48 am
Personally I think it kinda depends on the rock. I use my pressure flaker at an angle to my platforms not straight in. this helps me keep the bulbs to a minimum. But not everyone uses the same technique.
Title: Re: pressure flaking question
Post by: iowabow on May 06, 2011, 11:46:50 am
ok so at an angle the flake produces a smaller bulb.  I noticed that when I push in hard and take a larger part of the platform that the ridges kinda have a dip. If i pressure flake that ridge it will hinge so i take that one at an angle and with light pressure or abrade toward it. It would be great to hear how others do it!
Title: Re: pressure flaking question
Post by: JackCrafty on May 06, 2011, 12:35:47 pm
The general rule of thumb is small tool, small flake and big tool, big flake.  But you can get small flakes with a big tool by using less force and big flakes with a small tool by using more force.  Using more force will cause a higher amount of breakage.

I switch to smaller tool when I want smaller flakes.
Title: Re: pressure flaking question
Post by: JustinNC on May 06, 2011, 03:48:57 pm
Not to high jack, but thanks to Saw Filer and Sailordad, Ive got to where a can shoot some flakes of decent length...but when I shoot them to a high spot, they get paper thin, and I'm still as proportionately thick as I was before I took the flake, just a little thinner, and a little narrower in width....how to I get UNDER those high spots? Take a deeper bite on my platform, yet still below center?
Title: Re: pressure flaking question
Post by: JackCrafty on May 06, 2011, 07:38:35 pm
You don't get under the high spot.  You attack it from different directions and overlap the flakes.  The overlap is what takes off the high spot.
Title: Re: pressure flaking question
Post by: JustinNC on May 06, 2011, 08:04:04 pm
That thought hit me about mid afternoon lol. Thanks for the confirmation Patrick
Title: Re: pressure flaking question
Post by: JustinNC on May 07, 2011, 12:08:49 am
Worked lol. Had a nasty hinge on a high spot. Ground it down...shhhhh...and came at it from a couple different angles. Went right down. Now, if I could just keep from snapping them while pressure finishing. Messed up by putting it on the rubber rather than on the soft pad.