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  2. Toledo steel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toledo_steel

    The name "Toledo steel" comes from the city where these special steel products were most-notably crafted: Toledo, Spain.Toledo steel forging techniques were developed from ancient customs associated with culture in the Iberian Peninsula, and used to forge many different types of weapons over the course of many centuries.

  3. Saw - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saw

    Bow saw, turning saw, or buck saw: a saw with a narrow blade held in tension in a frame; the blade can usually be rotated and may be toothed on both edges; it may be a rip or a crosscut, and was the preferred form of hand saw for continental European woodworkers until superseded by machines;

  4. Bahco - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bahco

    In the mid-1990s Snap-on Incorporated, a global manufacturer and distributor of tools, entered the European market by acquiring the Spanish hand tool company Herramientas Eurotools S.A. In 1999, Snap-on acquired the business area Saws & Tools from Sandvik. The acquired business was named Bahco Group AB, a company with 2500 employees. [4]

  5. Navaja - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Navaja

    A contemporary navaja of traditional design, with a 12-inch (300 mm) blade. The navaja is a traditional Spanish folding-blade fighting and utility knife. [1]One of the oldest folding knife patterns still in production, the first true navajas originated in the Andalusian region of southern Spain. [1]

  6. Jigsaw (tool) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jigsaw_(tool)

    This kind of saw is now usually called a scroll saw. The modern portable jigsaw, with a rigid blade secured at one end and cutting on the up-stroke, was introduced in 1947 by Scintilla AG (later acquired by Bosch). [2] A jigsaw power tool is made up of an electric motor and a reciprocating saw blade.

  7. Circular saw - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Circular_saw

    Cordwood saws, also called buzz saws in some locales, use blade of a similar size to sawmills. Where a sawmill rips (cuts with the grain) a cordwood saw crosscuts (cuts across the grain). Cordwood saws can have a blade from 20 inches (510 mm) to more than 36 inches (910 mm) diameter depending on the power source and intended purpose.

  8. Dragsaw - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dragsaw

    Gasoline or kerosene powered drag saws were popular between the 1910s-1940s when chain saws became preferable. [5] They usually did 90 strokes of the saw per minute. [6] Most of all gasoline-engine-powered dragsaws were made in Portland, Oregon, United States. Steam-powered dragsaws utilized a piston hooked directly to the saw blade.

  9. Macuahuitl - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macuahuitl

    These could be knapped into blades or spikes, or into a circular design that looked like scales. [7] The macuahuitl is not specifically a sword or a club, although it approximates a European broadsword. [2] Historian John Pohl defines the weapon as a "kind of a saw sword". [8] Aztec warriors as shown in the 16th-century Florentine Codex (Vol ...