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Things I learned this week about blacksmithing


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#21 bigfootnampa

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Posted 07 March 2010 - 10:48 PM

"I've gotta say I often feel like I could whip a bear in a slap fight."

UUUummm Frosty DON"T trust your feelings right now!!! You are still a little OFF! You probably thought you were a pretty good match for a birch tree too... dinya??


#22 Frosty

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Posted 08 March 2010 - 02:11 AM

View Postbigfootnampa, on 07 March 2010 - 10:48 PM, said:

"I've gotta say I often feel like I could whip a bear in a slap fight."

UUUummm Frosty DON"T trust your feelings right now!!! You are still a little OFF! You probably thought you were a pretty good match for a birch tree too... dinya??

Good point about the birch tree, guess I should'a tried slapping it down. Eh? Oh heck, I've always been off though sometimes I could pretend to only be off a little bit. ;)

No worries, I may still have a few marbles spinning but I'm not crazy. . . Well, not THAT crazy. :o

On the serious side, I DO have to mind my real condition when I start feeling confident. For instance, I'm now wearing my hard hat in the shop, I haven't turned the power hammer on and won't without someone else there as a backup, I don't drive yet and am actually wearing no slips on my shoes on icy days.

I guess you could say I am in recent touch with my mortality and don't want another meeting soon.
Frosty the Lucky.
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#23 Clam River Coal Forge

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Posted 08 March 2010 - 09:34 PM

I am still wet behind the ears and have much to learn.
George

#24 Steve Shimanek

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Posted 10 March 2010 - 01:22 AM

I learned how to TIG weld mild steel; that aluminum is forgeable; that you should never put your hand on the foot pedal of an air hammer to steady yourself while working on the next machine over; how to make a wizard head handle; how to make Jim Poor style tongs; how to heat treat S7; the difference having a hammer that "hits" makes; and that having a world class teacher within 25 miles from my house is priceless. (Thanks Ted!)Now if weekends were only longer........

#25 Frosty

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Posted 11 March 2010 - 12:45 AM

View PostClam River Coal Forge, on 08 March 2010 - 09:34 PM, said:

I am still wet behind the ears and have much to learn.
George

Wear a wide brim hat? :huh:

Frosty the Lucky.
Outside of a dog a book is man's best friend.
Inside a dog it's too dark to read.
"Groucho Marx"

#26 K. Bryan Morgan

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Posted 11 March 2010 - 09:21 PM

The weather doesn't care that your a blacksmith and want to light a forge. Snowing -2f and no one in town will purge a new propane tank. Talk about frustrated.
Bryan


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#27 Andrew Smith

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Posted 11 March 2010 - 10:03 PM

I learned how to hot cut and drift a piece of steel for a tomahawk. I have only made ball peen hammer hawks but I have never made one from a rr spike or from anything without a hole already in it and all that I have to do is drift it. The first time I tried to make a hawk from a rr spike I failed because I had absolutely not idea how to do it and I had only been blacksmithing for a few months :( . since then I have been sort of intimidated by hot cutting and drifting. I finally decided to "face my fears" and take on hot cutting ....and ....well, it was a good success. :D


Hey K. Bryan Morgan, you should move to east Texas. we Texans can't stand anything colder than 30F. and that's because it only gets that cold (and occasionally a little colder than that) only about three weeks of the winter. We had the worst snow in ten years here(about 4-5in) and every school that I know of but one was out. All that to say, your propane most likely won't freeze up down here, and if it does then there is only three weeks out of the year that it MIGHT happen. :P


And O, I learned how NOT to forge weld and eventually figured out HOW to do it RIGHT. B)

-Andrew
Do not boast about your own work and accomplishments because it may cause you to become prideful. Let others boast of the work you have done.

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#28 mmthomas

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Posted 11 March 2010 - 10:10 PM

Steel splinters can be painful.

Don't go pick up scrap steel in your nice clothes. (corollary: always have gloves and other gear in pickup for seizing targets of opportunity)

#29 Frosty

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Posted 12 March 2010 - 09:21 PM

View PostAndrew Smith, on 11 March 2010 - 10:03 PM, said:

I learned how to hot cut and drift a piece of steel for a tomahawk. I have only made ball peen hammer hawks but I have never made one from a rr spike or from anything without a hole already in it and all that I have to do is drift it. The first time I tried to make a hawk from a rr spike I failed because I had absolutely not idea how to do it and I had only been blacksmithing for a few months :( . since then I have been sort of intimidated by hot cutting and drifting. I finally decided to "face my fears" and take on hot cutting ....and ....well, it was a good success. :D


Hey K. Bryan Morgan, you should move to east Texas. we Texans can't stand anything colder than 30F. and that's because it only gets that cold (and occasionally a little colder than that) only about three weeks of the winter. We had the worst snow in ten years here(about 4-5in) and every school that I know of but one was out. All that to say, your propane most likely won't freeze up down here, and if it does then there is only three weeks out of the year that it MIGHT happen. :P


And O, I learned how NOT to forge weld and eventually figured out HOW to do it RIGHT. B)

-Andrew

Andrew: Bryan will probably tell on me because this is a closely guarded secret in Alaska. Most of us here like it below 30f BECAUSE it keeps the Texans out of our hair. It's not like we don't have more than enough room for any and all Texans who might want to visit, heck, cut AK in half and Texas would be the third largest state in the Union, it's just that they talk kind of funny.

Frosty the Lucky. (I'm NOT in reach of one of my Texan friends! :o )
Outside of a dog a book is man's best friend.
Inside a dog it's too dark to read.
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#30 Mainely,Bob

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Posted 12 March 2010 - 09:35 PM

When I lived in Texas the best Texan joke I heard was;"You know what a Texan is?A Mexican on his way to Oklahoma."

Mainely,Bob-Who will surely hear about this if any of his Texan friends read it. :unsure:
"Between our dreams and actions lies this world"-B. Springsteen

#31 Andrew Smith

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Posted 12 March 2010 - 09:46 PM

Well, I won't take any of that personal. :mellow: I'll get over it. We Texans have our own little joke that kinda goes like this:

Whats two things a Texan hates to see coming toward him?

a Mexican with a knife and a Yankee with a U-haul :P

And O, anything north of Dallas is a Yankee. :P However I do ave a good friend who is from Chicago ,and I don't talk as funny as most Texans.

Last but not least, I hate to bust your bubble Frosty but, I would love to come to Alaska some time, however, only in the HOTTEST time of the SUMMER. I am sort of an outdoors man and Alaska seems to have some nice landscape.

-Andrew
Do not boast about your own work and accomplishments because it may cause you to become prideful. Let others boast of the work you have done.

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#32 Andrew Smith

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Posted 12 March 2010 - 09:48 PM

Frosty, I will try not to tell on you about exposing your Alaskan secret. ;)
Do not boast about your own work and accomplishments because it may cause you to become prideful. Let others boast of the work you have done.

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#33 Mainely,Bob

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Posted 12 March 2010 - 10:00 PM

Heard all the Yankee jokes.Learned to talk Texan and the jokes stopped. :)
Lived in Tejas for 13 years then came back up north and had to put up with all the southern/redneck jokes till I learned to talk Yankee again. :(

Funny how when you talk fast folks think you`re a naturally obnoxious know-it-all.
When you talk slow people seem to think you think slow.
Far as I can tell nothing about me changed but the accent. :D
"Between our dreams and actions lies this world"-B. Springsteen

#34 K. Bryan Morgan

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Posted 13 March 2010 - 03:34 AM

FROSTY, dag nabbit now you went an let the cat outta the bag. What are we gonna do with you. Oh, I know. Send you great white.......... birch hunting, only this time with a feller buncher. That way you can sit in air conditioned comfort and slay them to your hearts content. :lol:


Oh and I got the propane. The forge is up and running and I broke in the anvil. Made a nice drive hook to hang my coat on. :D
Bryan


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#35 Frosty

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Posted 13 March 2010 - 12:37 PM

View PostMainely,Bob, on 12 March 2010 - 10:00 PM, said:

Heard all the Yankee jokes.Learned to talk Texan and the jokes stopped. :)
Lived in Tejas for 13 years then came back up north and had to put up with all the southern/redneck jokes till I learned to talk Yankee again. :(

Funny how when you talk fast folks think you`re a naturally obnoxious know-it-all.
When you talk slow people seem to think you think slow.
Far as I can tell nothing about me changed but the accent. :D

Hmmmmm. Have you tried sleeping in the freezer Bob? I'm thinking that'd take care of any remaining Texican accent.

Frosty the Lucky.
Outside of a dog a book is man's best friend.
Inside a dog it's too dark to read.
"Groucho Marx"

#36 Frosty

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Posted 13 March 2010 - 12:39 PM

View PostAndrew Smith, on 12 March 2010 - 09:48 PM, said:

Frosty, I will try not to tell on you about exposing your Alaskan secret. ;)

Well, okay Andrew! I'll make room for you to bunk if you ever make it up this way. We're pretty close to decent fishing and mosquito bashing here in Meadow Lakes.

Frosty the Lucky.
Outside of a dog a book is man's best friend.
Inside a dog it's too dark to read.
"Groucho Marx"

#37 Frosty

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Posted 13 March 2010 - 12:45 PM

View PostK. Bryan Morgan, on 13 March 2010 - 03:34 AM, said:

FROSTY, dag nabbit now you went an let the cat outta the bag. What are we gonna do with you. Oh, I know. Send you great white.......... birch hunting, only this time with a feller buncher. That way you can sit in air conditioned comfort and slay them to your hearts content. :lol:


Oh and I got the propane. The forge is up and running and I broke in the anvil. Made a nice drive hook to hang my coat on. :D

A feller buncher?! I can have a feller buncher?! You are a pal! Heck just the thought is sending tingling feelings up my leg!

How do you like the forge? I've heard nothing but good about them but nobody else has probably tried one in sub zero temps. It's a good time to pre-heat the anvil or it'll suck the heat right out of the work. Even at +10f my anvils will take the color off 1/2" sq during just a few blows. Just don't do any sledge work over the hardy, the anvil'll be fine.

Frosty the Lucky.
Outside of a dog a book is man's best friend.
Inside a dog it's too dark to read.
"Groucho Marx"

#38 Andrew Smith

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Posted 13 March 2010 - 01:03 PM

View PostFrosty, on 13 March 2010 - 12:39 PM, said:

Well, okay Andrew! I'll make room for you to bunk if you ever make it up this way. We're pretty close to decent fishing and mosquito bashing here in Meadow Lakes.

Frosty the Lucky.


Fishing! I love to fish. I am from south Louisiana and my Dad's entire family still live down there and they are all Cajun to the bone soaked through to the marrow. :blink: I grew up in Texas though so I like it better here.

This past summer we went fishing in a town called Grand Isle on the coast of Louisiana. We pretty much would fish all night and sleep half of the day and eat seafood the other half of the day. :D One night 4 of us caught 400 white trout and I caught 4 Red Fish longer than 39" and snapped 2- 25lb test lines and 3-65lb test lines and broke one fishing rod all in one night! needless to say that was the funnest night of the week. B) And I ain't jokin either. I can post some pics if you want me to prove it.

I heard the Salmon fishing is good when they are coming in to spawn, I really like good cooked salmon.

now what does any of this have to do with blacksmithing????? :mellow: :huh: Not really sure.

-Andrew
Do not boast about your own work and accomplishments because it may cause you to become prideful. Let others boast of the work you have done.

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#39 Frosty

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Posted 13 March 2010 - 01:43 PM

What does fishing have to do with blacksmithing and you're cajun stock? So we'll forge some fish cooking gear and I'll happily absorb some cajun recipes but for the record how's blackened salmon sound?

Actually I'm not big on salmon but that's just me, I'm more for halibut, so how's "mongolian halibut or halibut fajitas sound?

Salmon season usually starts sometime in July around here. Trout fishing's good too though I'll have to ask around for the hot streams and lakes, I haven't wetted a line in a while myself.

Frosty the Lucky.
Outside of a dog a book is man's best friend.
Inside a dog it's too dark to read.
"Groucho Marx"

#40 Andrew Smith

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Posted 13 March 2010 - 02:27 PM

Well I'm not too picky of a person. I will eat just about anything as long as I have a glass of fresh sweet tea to swallow it down with :P . I am of Cajun stock and whooooo boy can we cook some good food.

The only place that you can get REAL and I mean REAL Cajun food is either from deep deep south Louisiana or unless the person cooking has a deep Cajun accent and has lived at least fifteen years in south Louisiana. Every where else is just a bunch of scammers lying to you. I don't have an accent but my Mom can cook some real good food, So good that you don't get up from the table until you know that if you eat any more you will have to have surgery. . She's not true Cajun, she is from north Louisiana therefore she is a yankee, but my grandma (my Dad's Mom) taught her how to cook.

I actually never heard of halibut, however, I am up for trying anything. I know that I like any kind of oriental food, I enjoy fajitas, and I really like fish, so I guess that that will work.
Do not boast about your own work and accomplishments because it may cause you to become prideful. Let others boast of the work you have done.

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