Blacksmith and Metalworking Forum
This is a discussion on Show me abused anvils within the Blacksmithin' forums, part of the Blacksmithing category; Originally Posted by ThomasPowers That story seems to be more of an urbal legend used to explain the tendency of ...
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| Thomas you are proberly right ,there are plenty of pikeless anvils this side of the pond ,and my granddad never spoke of men in grey, or blue, bashing the anvil pikes of , we could do a good job of it ourselves.
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Since old anvils were welded up from pieces many of them have planes of weakness where the old welds were---in particular the horns and heals and so suffer the tragic loss under use. Remember too that cold increases steel's brittleness and that we often get colder temps in the USA than in much of europe. Thomas
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| http://www.iforgeiron.com/gallery/da...cture_0651.jpg Just last week, I saw another one (same brand) in almost identical condition. |
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Cast iron bodied anvil tend to have very thick heels to prevent this common failure mode. My large Fisher has a heel so thick that almost nothing I make can straddle it sideways; luckily I have an Arm and Hammer with a very thin heel close by so I can tweak things like forks on it's heel.
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A question about repairing sway backed anvils: I have always been a bit reluctant to build up a sway backed, anvil for fear of popping of the face plate as the weld solidifys and cools. For those of you who have made this type of repair, how did you do it and how successful was the repair? Thanks. Patrick |
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I just sent an anvil down to texas that was cut in half. Now that's abuse. The bottom of it was missing, it was a trenton, and if in one piece, I would have kept it, it would have been around 200lbs.
Last edited by m_brothers; 10-14-2008 at 10:06 PM. |
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Since they were welded at the waist it could be the remains of a weld failure. I have the base of an anvil missing everything from the waist up---I know it was once a complete anvil as it was weight stamped for an appropriate anvil with that sized base.
__________________ Thomas |
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This anvil was waiting for me when I first came to my inlaw's place - been in the family since past memory. It's a 1862 anvil with a fairly thin (8 - 10 mm) face. I've seen other anvils of the same form (same maker?), showing the same default: square horn broken off. Looks somewhat like a manufacturing problem. She's a bit swaybacked as well, but still works well enough, has a decent face (despite being thin), and the price couldn't be beaten :-).
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