Blacksmith and Metalworking Forum
This is a discussion on Rebar projects within the Blacksmithin' forums, part of the Blacksmithing category; Lots of people seem to have a fairly large supply of the stuff. While I know it seems to be ...
| |||||||
| Register | FAQ | Calendar | Search | Today's Posts | Mark Forums Read |
| |||
|
Lots of people seem to have a fairly large supply of the stuff. While I know it seems to be frowned upon as an unreliable source, it is an extremely cheap (read: usually free) source for practice and can be added for interesting designs. So, in the latter part of my 11-8am shift, I got thinking to myself "Myself, you should see what other people have used rebar for in various projects". Here's one that I did over christmas break to get the ball rolling. A couple of candle-holders |
| |||
|
I recently seriously decimated my stash making J stakes for my neighbor to hold the base of his chainlink fence down to keep his dog in---a win/win use IMHO. I did take the scraps and make some floor snakes from them: taper the tail downl flatten a head and punch eyes/nose. twist the body to get better patterning from the rebar stripes and then curve in a series of S curves. I do my curves by opening up the postvise a ways and then sticking the head in a bit and putting a piece of pipe on the tail and bending down. then flip it over advance it till the bend now indexes on the post vise jaw and bend the next curve; repeat. Note: I do this hot. The other thing I do from re-bar is I use it to reinforce concrete pours...
__________________ Thomas |
| |||
|
Now you are getting me tempted to do a couple of 20' lengths as a snakes for my next pad: have them curve from side to side and orient them 90 deg and they sould do a good job---might convince the concrete folk I was a bit odd...I'll tell them it's to scare off the rattlers!
__________________ Thomas |
| |||
|
Don't know wether your rebar is same spec as ours over here in Britain, but we use it to make round punches, slot punches and such, usually work quite well, especially using the larger diameter rebar and forging down the smaller required tool section
|
| |||
|
I did a google search on the specifications of rebar a while back and posted the results in one of the knife threads here about Railroad Spike Knives comparing the carbon content of the grades of rebar to rr spikes. There are 3 grades of rebar as I remember ranging from approximately mild steel to a bit over 30 points of carbon or somwhere in that neighborhood. I have 2 hot chisels that I made out of rebar about 7 years ago and they are still working good. Rebar is much maligned but I venture that it is much due to hear say rather than people's actual experience with it. People say that it is made from a hodge podge of steels and it is, but the carbon content etc must fall within a specific range for the application. Remember that rebar is designed to be used in critical applications where peoples lives literally depend on it so there must be strict quality controls on its production.
__________________ Never try to teach a pig to sing, it wastes your time and annoys the pig. I do not suffer fools gladly. |