Blacksmith and Metalworking Forum
This is a discussion on Double horn vs. single horn anvils within the Blacksmithin' forums, part of the Blacksmithing category; in our school shop we have about every type there is, and i must say that above all I prefere ...
| |||||||
| Register | FAQ | Calendar | Search | Today's Posts | Mark Forums Read |
| ||||
|
Thanks for all of the replies. I was leaning towards the double horn style of anvil. I have used a couple different ones and they seemed to do every thing I want and then some. But now with home heating oil being $4.80 a gallon it looks like my new shop anvil fund is going to be diverted to the new wood stove for the house fund
__________________ Ones thirst for knowledge should never be quenched. |
| ||||
|
Dave, you might want to look into a pellet stove over wood. They put out a ton of heat and you can run 1000lbs. of pellets through it and have barely a pound of ash afterward. Most come with a glass front door so you still get to see the pretty flames. I don't have one in this house but did in my previous place. We went from $175 a month electric (electric heat) bill down to $40 a month. This was around 1998 or so. Pellets were around $240 a ton and that would last 2-3 months. The newer models might be more efficient. And to come back to topic, as many here know, I have the Nimba Gladiator double horn Italian style and love it.
__________________ The blacksmith and the artist Reflect it in their art Forge their creativity Closer to the heart (Rush) |
| |||
|
Of course in areas where the electricity has a tendency to go out if the weather gets bad a pellet stove goes offline at just the worst time! Nothing cosier than lighting the oil lamps and snugging up by the woodstove during a bad storm!
__________________ Thomas |
| ||||
|
not sure about current models but the one I had, you could hook a car battery to and run it from that if house electric went out. Don't get me wrong, an open fire is awesome to feel and see but not as efficient as the pellets.
__________________ The blacksmith and the artist Reflect it in their art Forge their creativity Closer to the heart (Rush) |
| |||
|
Our woodstove is not "an open fire" it's totally closed up but has a nifty clear ceramic window. I run it a lot of the time on scrounged wood too as firewood is all soft wood out here lessen you are down in the pecan growing region and can pay top dollar for trimmings. My winter heating cost is about 150 dollars for this last winter. nice having a passive solar house.
__________________ Thomas |
| ||||
|
Our neighbor, when the power went out, damaged their stove due to overheating (several hundred dollars for the new fan and controls). Dealer said you could not use the stove without electric. Well, when there is no electric for heat, that is when you need the stove to work !! Wood pellets are like buying new steel, great is money is not a problem. But if money were not a problem you would not be using a stove to save money to start with. Look for a stove that will run on multiple fuels, pellets, pallets, scraps lumber, scrounged wood, etc
__________________ Tools do not make the blacksmith, the blacksmith makes the tools. gc If someone questions your standards, they are not high enough. |
| ||||
|
I bought a real nice Jotul wood stove with front and side loading. It is a non cat stove that takes up to a 28" stick, it has a glass front and with a burn time of about 16 hours. It is the cost of double and triple wall 8" stainless chimeny that really hurts ( about $200 per 48" sec.) I need 28'
__________________ Ones thirst for knowledge should never be quenched. |