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Spring steel katana are built around one priority: surviving impact. Our 65Mn spring steel swords hold a working edge at HRC 50-55 while absorbing the kind of lateral stress that would chip or snap a harder blade outright. Five models in stock, all forged in Longquan, priced from $150 to $220.
65Mn is a manganese spring steel with 0.56-0.65% carbon content. That carbon level sits below what you find in high-carbon steels like 1095 or T10, and that gap is the whole point. Less carbon means more ductility. A 65Mn blade can flex well past what you would ever encounter in a cut and return to true without taking a permanent set.
Put that in practical terms: if your swing clips a hard surface off-angle, the blade absorbs the shock and keeps its geometry. A harder, more brittle steel might hold a sharper edge day-to-day, but one bad contact can end it. Spring steel trades some edge retention for the kind of structural reliability that matters in tameshigiri, heavy cutting practice, and dojo use where blades take real punishment.
One thing buyers sometimes miss: 65Mn develops a surface patina faster than stainless or high-polish tool steels. Wipe the blade down with choji oil after every session. That is not optional maintenance, it is what keeps the steel stable for years. Our sword care guide covers the full routine.
Intended use first. If you are cutting tatami mats twice a week, a spring steel blade at HRC 50-55 will outlast a harder blade in your hands because it handles the lateral forces on follow-through cuts without micro-chipping. For display or occasional light cutting, other steels may suit you better. Check our buying guide for a full steel comparison.
Budget range. Our spring steel katana run $150 to $220. At $150, the Crimson Eclipse gives you a functional, full-tang 65Mn blade. At $220, the Frost Moon Blade and Scarlet Phantom add more refined fittings and finishing work.
Do not expect a hamon. Spring steel does not produce the visible temper line you get from clay-tempered T10 or 1095. The heat treatment is through-hardened, uniform across the blade. If a visible hamon matters to you aesthetically, look at our high-carbon steel options instead.
Edge geometry matters more than hardness here. At HRC 50-55, the blade will take a good edge but will need more frequent touching up than a harder steel. A consistent sharpening angle, around 20-25 degrees per side on a 65Mn katana, gives you the best balance of sharpness and edge durability for cutting practice.
Silicon-manganese alloy, HRC 50–55. Engineered to flex under heavy contact and return to true geometry. The correct choice for high-impact tameshigiri, training, and blades that take hard use.
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