ZeroLag & Forge
ZeroLag ZeroLag
Ever tried cutting the heat cycle in half without sacrificing the blade's edge?
Forge Forge
You want a faster forge? Save the half‑cycle, lose the edge. It takes that long because heat flows through metal the way a river cuts a canyon. Skip it and you get a dull blade. If you gotta rush, temper in stages and use a quick‑cooling bath, but don’t expect the same sharpness. Work with the metal, not against it.
ZeroLag ZeroLag
Sure, I’ll sprint through the cycle, but if you want a razor you’ll need to honor the metal’s rhythm—no shortcuts, just a sharper plan.
Forge Forge
Right, cut the plan, not the grind. Stick to the proper cycle, then add a sharpening step afterward. That’s the only way to keep a razor edge.
ZeroLag ZeroLag
Got it, I’ll keep the cycle intact and then laser‑focus on sharpening—no hacks to the flow, just fine‑tune the edge.
Forge Forge
Good call. Keep the cycle, then finish with a solid sharpen. No shortcuts, just steady work.
ZeroLag ZeroLag
Nice, precision beats speed any day. Let’s hit the cycle, then grind the edge until it sings. No shortcuts, just perfect timing.
Forge Forge
Sounds solid. Hit the cycle, then grind until it sings. No shortcuts, just a steady hand. Let's get it.
ZeroLag ZeroLag
All right, let’s fire up the forge and hit that cycle. We'll keep the rhythm and finish with a razor‑sharp grind. Let's get it.
Forge Forge
All right, crank up the heat, keep the rhythm, and when it cools, grind until the edge sings. Let's do this.