Blacksmith and Metalworking Forum
This is a discussion on Blacksmith and Machinist? within the Machinery General Discussions forums, part of the Machinists category; Stupid question I know, but after looking at another post here, I thought I'd try to drag out a few ...
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Stupid question I know, but after looking at another post here, I thought I'd try to drag out a few more of you. How many other blacksmiths out there are machinists as well? Most of the sources that I know say that blacksmiths of the past were quite often at least familiar enough with a metal lathe to make the things that needed to be machined for repairs to both his and others tools. However I find that not one in ten of the actual blacksmiths I know in this day and age actually run or own a lathe. I see some of you do have machines already, but wondered what kinds/ types you might have. Frog Valley has a complete older machine shop with a benchtop Atlas Lathe with all the trimmings and a vertical/horizontal mill that is turn of the last century. Both come in handy for repairs to power hammers and more. I recommend at least a familiarity with these tools as cold working of forgings is often the finishing touch that is required, and the repair capabilities of both are obvious benefits to any shop.
__________________ Spare Time? Is that like day off? I've heard of those...never had one of my own. Mark Schwenk- artist/blacksmith at Frog Valley Forge http://www.frogvalleyforge.com Last edited by frogvalley; 03-25-2007 at 12:23 AM. |
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I very definitely will agree with you Junior. City shops might have been one thing and country another. Don't misunderstand me. Smiths were machine men to the point that they invented the tools that built the world. All smiths were ( are ) not created equal. Modern machinists environments are really nice places for the large part. Well lighted, clean environments. Level, painted cement floors. There are shops that are similar in nature to this but they are also a welding shop and perhaps have other issues ( hydraulic hose machines and assembly areas for other goods produced ). These shops may have 4-5 employees and a bookkeeper ( perhaps owners wife ). These shops may also have an area to build hot rods ( paint too ). Most that I have seen have no forge or even anvil. They will have benders and presses, high speed tapping machines, lathes, mills ( some cnc perhaps ). Of course drills and perhaps a small surface grinder, shaper etc for various needs. Most that I have met in this venue have no hot work experience. My earliest memories of shops are blacksmiths. The first was Forrest Robinson of Ellston, Iowa. He had a small shop with forge, small line shaft running on a gas motor, electric welder and oxy/acetelyne. He had a drill press and large wheeled grinder that ran off of the lineshaft ( as did the forge blower ). Dad took the multitude of the repairs to Forrest. I grew up and went to school with his Grandsons. The second shop was that of Gilmour Barbour ( rural Kellerton Iowa ). Gilmour had a bigger shop and more stuff. Gilmour had a cast firepot made from something, can't recall. The tuyere was nothing more than a tee of cast sewer pipe. Inside the pot there was a rain cap that went on vents. THis cap was I guess 3/4" up from the bottom of the bowl ( bowl being I guess 8" diameter). Ash dump on bottom of tuyere. Blower was a Hoover vaccuum and control was from a Singer Sewing machine. Also had an airgate with butterfly. Beside this forge was an anvil that now belongs to Gilmours son ( unknown anvil brand but I'm guessin about 175 lbs ). Also in forge area was a 30 lb Kerrihard hammer that now resides in my shop. Forging area was really about the size of Juniors shop. Gilmour was born in 1880's some time. I really need to visit his grave to find out exactly when. The balance of his shop was dedicated to welding and machines. Drills, lathes (2), shaper, trailer welding rig ( with oxy acet as well ). Last time I saw Gilmour in the shop he was 85 or 86 and he had just crawled out from under a combine with an electrode holder in his hand after welding up something. A true pioneer in Ringgold County Iowa history as was Forrest. He (Gilmour )would say that yes he had a forge but was not a blacksmith. He would also say that yes he had lathes ( one with a mill table) but was not a machinist. He ground a million sickles with a small electric motor that hung on a cable that was attached to a trolley. Sickle bar sat on stands below the trolley. Motor had handles and a stone. On/off switch and a reversing switch. Sparks always went away from him in this manner. Very humble man but opinionated, yes. He could weld it. He could braze ice cream to cow patties. If he couldn't fix it, he'd send you on down the road. Forrest was of the same thread but different. Both were honest men of integrity, skill and ethics. We all have personalities. These men were my early mentors. I can only hope to be a shadow of them in life. I can only imagine visiting Strasil Brothers shop in my youth ( having been there later in my life ). Quite a place indeed.
__________________ " It ain't real if it ain't forged " |
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I am a machinist by trade and clearly see where most modern machines were invented by blacksmiths and evolved into the machines that we use today. I also have a pretty complete machine shop along with a fabrication and welding facility. Actually I have 2 machine shops with manual and cnc capabilities. What drew me blacksmithing was being able to see how this all evolved from that simple statement ( by hammer and hand all trades stand ). I dont contribute to this thread because I do this for a living and the last thing that I want to do in my time off is talk about MACHINING. I try to leave the modern stuff at the plant and keep it simple at the forge.
__________________ Give out before you give up. If it was easy anybody could do it. |
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I have no real interest in modern machining practices, but the older tooling such as I have, some of which runs from the same line shaft over head, is very cool and much more in keeping with the time frame of all the other blacksmith tooling that I have. I am a blacksmith and sculptor for a living but still find time to chat about blacksmithing, unless of course I have been at the forge and hammer all day. Sometimes its just too much. Knowing ALL of the techniques and tools required to work iron, including blacksmithing and machining do go hand in hand though. Since there is no one around here that I would trust to fix my power hammers and other machines, necessity is the primary reason to keep a working machine shop.
__________________ Spare Time? Is that like day off? I've heard of those...never had one of my own. Mark Schwenk- artist/blacksmith at Frog Valley Forge http://www.frogvalleyforge.com |
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I have a lathe and a vertical mill in addition to my forging equipment and make income from the entire shop so they are tools as part of a whole. Like "Yesteryear", I work in a screw machine shop by day so have an exposure to it there, which helps me at home on some jobs. I'm quite sure the machine trade came from blacksmiths because they were the traditional authorities on metal working. Many inventors in the last two centuries were blacksmiths or the sons of 'smiths. Of course, you have to toss in those individuals who were gunsmiths, armorers, etc., but the trades are all related. It is now considered an insult to call a machinist by the name, "blacksmith", (theoretically because he doesn't understand precision measurement) but it's pretty hypocritical to do so since that's where the trade originated - I've had this conversation with several machinists and most just shake their heads. |
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If you like working with metal, it is all one. You can form an object by removing what isn't that object from the original piece (machining), by building it up in sections (welding), by compression (forging), by molding (casting), or any combinations of any these. They all have their place. The point is to look at what you want as the finished object, and select the tools and methods that accomplish that the best. NOT what you are most comfortable doing, but which is the most appropriate. Then you will choose to learn the skills as you need them. Of particular interest to me is that old, fairly large machinery for machining is MUCH cheaper than old large machinery for forging. Supply and demand, of course. For less than the price of one Beaudry power hammer, I have two lathes, two milling machines, and two shapers with oodles of tooling. Machining tools are a big help in a forging shop. I just got done making my larger Beaudry dies using my 16" Steptoe shaper which cost me $100. I made a replacement roller bearing for it using a 13" x 8' 1911 Southbend lathe I got basically for free. Both the 3 hp Gorton vertical mill and small Hardinge horizontal mill have paid for themselves many times in doing odd jobs related to projects, but neither one was very expensive. I have no formal training as a machinist. That means I ask a lot of questions of machinists and read a lot of books. And I take my time, practicing with focus. It's worth it. I only have limited formal training in welding. That means I ask a lot of question of professional welders and read a lot of books. And I take my time, practicing with focus. It's worth it. I have lots of training in blacksmithing. That means I ask a lot of questions of other professional blacksmiths and read a lot of books. And I take my time, practicing with focus. It's worth it. It's all good. |
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i was a machinist/tool maker for almost 20 years, had to quit because of illness. what got me into blacksmithing, the fact that i missed machining so much, i ran across the Gingery machine shop from scrap on the internet, and built me the lathe just so i could make metal chips again i then used my foundry furnace as a forge and havent stopped either since. im always casting something or forging something, mainly knives now, now i have a small machine shop mainly consisting of turn of the century machines (1800's to 1900's) some of the best machines were built back then, they are slow but very good oh yeah, i doesnt bother me, being called one or the other, i just tell people im a master of metal LOL, i do it all metal is metal, how its worked isnt the point, just as long as its made right, have fun Ron Smith |
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I've met Rob Gunter who used to be the staff blacksmith for Sandia National Labs---think aerospace and nuclear---not exactly lo-tech fields but they still found that having someone able to forge preforms could save money and time (but I repeat myself) when using exotic top dollar alloys. Jock Dempsey over at anvil fire claims that a good general purpose blacksmith shop should include a mill and a lathe. The switch to CNC did floot the used market with old hand controlled machines; wish I had stockpiled some when the peak of the flood was.
__________________ Thomas |