Blacksmith and Metalworking Forum
This is a discussion on Removing Scale within the Blacksmithin' forums, part of the Blacksmithing category; Ive been having trouble removing scale when Ive finshed forging. I get it hot enough to wire brush it off ...
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Ive been having trouble removing scale when Ive finshed forging. I get it hot enough to wire brush it off & seems it forms back about as fast. Im not really wanting to get iron wraped around my head by a power wire brush. Thank You Ron |
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try wire brushing then wash it in the sleck tub give it a good rub over with your hands ,then back over the fire and get it to just a black heat,and brush again with a smoother brush ,when i used to compete at shoing competitions thats the way i got a deep wire brush finnish more like a blueing , you have got to put some real effort into the brush and polish the job ,then let it cool ,
__________________ spelling and grammer inforcer |
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Junior, my advice for that is quite simple. Have a gross and a tare weight. This will require you to take your overalls off in front of Nurse Ratchet but thats ok too. Weigh your overalls ( pliers and everything in your pockets too inc. boots ) and then weigh yourself. You now have ammunition to combat their thinking you have gained weight AND you can just tell them your issue is a gross weight problem. Tare weight is fine
__________________ " It ain't real if it ain't forged " Last edited by Ten Hammers; 03-08-2007 at 08:11 PM. |
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Wirebrushing usually works pretty well for me. If you can, find one of those big bristle butchers wire brushes, those really take the scale off. Also, when hot wirebrushing, try dipping the wires in water. It works better for me.
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Ron, Two things I'd add. Gotta brush like heck, and keep brushing til the piece is below a scaling heat. If you need it cleaner than that, pickle it. I use white vinegar because I got little kids around and I don't worry so much about them spilling it or getting hurt. I know there's other faster acids out there, but good old white vinegar works good for me and it's cheap. You can usually get the no-name brand at the super market for a buck and a half a gallon. Then when it's picked for a day or so I use a stainless steel soft bristled brush on it, then neutralize in a baking soda wash, then rinse with clean water. |
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I've used borax in the slack tub for larger pieces. How much to add, couldn't tell ya. Keep adding til it works? I heat the iron to a hot red heat and quench. The scale pops right off, of course don't do this with high carbon steel. However, I preffer vinegar as most of my work that needs de-scaling is small enough to fit in a 5 quart icecream pail.
__________________ Havamal 76-77 (though it depends on the translation) |