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Real-Life Activities

Real-Life Decision Making -- Solution

You recommend that you make a plainer gate out of harder metal so it will last.

You might not be able to charge as much for this gate, but you can still make it look nice and it will last longer than the others. You decide that if the gate falls apart in a year, your name will be mud, both in the blacksmithing community and probably with most of this group.

Curtis Evans is a member of a blacksmith's guild. He says this is just one of many decisions that a blacksmith must face. Deciding how much to charge for a job and what metal you should build something out of is common in a blacksmith's job.

"The key," says Evans, "is finding a metal that's not too soft so it wears quickly, but not so hard that it's brittle."

A gate that is built out of softer metal is easier to work with, but it won't last as long. The hardness of the metal is determined by the amount of carbon found in it. The more carbon that is present in the metal, the harder it is.