Puneet Varma (Editor)

Helko

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Industry
  
Manufacturing

Products
  
axes, forestry tools

Headquarters
  
Wuppertal

Key people
  
Carl Helsper (Founder)

Website
  
helko.de

Founded
  
1844

Helko httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaen992Hel

Helko billhook machete review


Helko (stylised as helko and formally known as Helko-Werk), is a German manufacturer of axes and forestry tools, located in the town of Wuppertal and founded in 1844. Today, it is one of the largest axe manufacturers in Europe, and exports products to more than 40 countries.

Contents

Helko vario 2000 heavy log splitter made in germany


History

The helko enterprise was started by a member of the Helsper family in 1844 in Cronenberg, now a district of Wuppertal. For many years, it was referred to as the Helsper Werkzeugfabrik, or Helsper Tool Factory. By the early twentieth century, the Helsper Werkzeugfabrik had begun exporting axes to Africa, Asia, and the Americas.

In the early nineteen thirties, a partner named Kotthaus joined the enterprise, and the company became known as helko (helsper / kotthaus). When Helko took over the Helsper Werkzeugfabrik in the early sixties, the complete company name in the German Register of Commerce became "Carl & Aug. Helsper GmbH & Co., KG, helko-werk". Nowadays reads the factory name Helko - Werk GmbH.

Product design

Helko axes and hatchets are crafted to meet stringent German DIN manufacturing standards (DIN 7287, 7294, 7295, 5131, and 5132).

In accordance with DIN directions, the hardness of Helko edges is between 47-56 HRC (Rockwell) up to 30 millimeters from the cutting edge, while the eye is generally left unhardened to prevent cracks in the steel. During the manufacturing process, the axe heads are hardened and cooled down in an oil bath prior to being heated to around 400° Celsius. This relieves strain on the surface of the steel after hardening, and provides the correct level of hardness. Unlike many axes which are cooled in a water bath, Helko tools are cooled in lukewarm oil to avoid small chinks in the material. Afterwards, the tools are sandblasted to remove oil residue from the surface prior to grinding and painting.

Via its Vario 2000 and Tomahawk product line, Helko also produces axes with interchangeable blades and handles.

References

Helko Wikipedia