I've been trying for a while now to make good arrowheads, but there is a problem somewhere, but I can't tell what it is!
I've made like 20 arrowheads but only one came out in one piece (and still isn't a beauty). The problem is that soon after or even during the rolling of the socket it breaks!
I don't know what I am doing wrong exactly. I flatten the end of a rod of iron to about 3 times the width of the rod with a thickness of about a sheet of paper. Then I carefully fold it to form a cone/socket (making sure to bring in the shoulder first). Sometimes I see fractures here already where the shoulder of the socket joins what will become the point. Then I use needle nose pliers inserted into the socket to hold the head whilst trying to make the point. This is where almost without fail the socket breaks of from the point right where the two join together. I can't tell what I'm doing wrong. Am I making the walls of the socket too thin, or do I work the metal too cold? I assume I put strain on the socket when I shape the point and that that movement causes the fractures to break the head in two, but I don't know how else to do it.
Help would be greatly appreciated, so if anyone has experience making arrowheads I'll gladly take your advice if you recognize what I'm doing wrong.