Blacksmith and Metalworking Forum
This is a discussion on Hardy Tools within the Blacksmithin' forums, part of the Blacksmithing category; Hello All, I am starting to make more of my own hardy tools & jigs "And Loving It!" They are ...
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You are most welcome cheftcook, that's what the blueprints are all about, sharing ideas with others.
__________________ Irnsrgn Knowledge must be shared or it lies dead in the mind. The Blacksmith must use Hammer and Flame to force the iron down the path of his own choosing. I usually find it much easier to be wrong once in while than to try to be perfect. |
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My hardy hole on my big anvil is 1 1/4" so it's a lot harder to make tools for it. I have to make them to fit the small anvil or make them small and put sleeves on them. Steve
__________________ Never take off your hat, never sign your name |
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I have 3 anvils with 1.5" hardy holes, (one even has two of them). I took a piece of square tubing and hacksawed about 1.5" down each corner and then heated it and folded the flaps out flat to make a sleeve to convert the large hole smaller---actually have a couple that nest so I can get down to the size of the hardy holes on the smaller anvils.
__________________ Thomas |
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From Blueprint BP0269 Just a couple of ways to tame those large hardie holes.
__________________ Tools do not make the blacksmith, the blacksmith makes the tools. gc If you do not build a box, then you do not have to think outside the box. If someone questions your standards, they are not high enough. |
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I have found a source for hardy material, a rail road scrap pile near by has a number of small slices of railroad track that were cut from the end of the rails. they are from 1/6 to 8" in thickness. I cut them thru the web and work the web to a size that will fit the hardy. I have made hot and cold cuts, fullers, swages and texture tools from both the tops and bottoms of the rail. My first anvil was a 3' section of track stood on end. I used the end of the top as my anvil and sharpened the web for a hardy. If I did it over I would cut two or three slots in the bottom of the side of the track for bending "forks".
__________________ Iron... the other thermal plastic "He was the kind of a guy that could screw up an anvil with a tack hammer" |
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The nice thing about using the sq tubing is that it provides a surface for the tool to rest on when you are hammering on it. The angle iron has the tooling supported on one side and not on the other---works fine for tools you will be twisting on; but not as good for impact tooling.
__________________ Thomas |
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I have some torsion bar stock that would make excellent 3/4 or 7/8 tools, but its just a little too small for the 1" hardy in my anvil. I think I'll try to find a piece of square tubing to adapt it. Its extremely hard, tough stuff. Its pretty hard even normalized.
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