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I Forge Iron

Jmercier

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  • Website URL
    http://www.tharkis.com

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  • Location
    Woonsocket RI.
  • Interests
    Blacksmithing Bladesmithing
  • Occupation
    Software Engineer

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  1. The guy probably wouldn't know how to spell 'ruined' if he did know =/ That poor anvil =(
  2. Hey Vinny, It's Justin Mercier, from at Mace's hammerin. Did you get my facebook message? I've still got that anvil for sale that I didnt drag over to Mace's hammerin 2 weeks ago. No horn, but with a hot-cut hardy already matched to it, but other than that very usable and I've got it priced to move. It's been used plenty in recent years, but like i told you, my shop got downsized when i started restoring this car, and I'm dumping my extra tools =) I've got the pictures and stuff over here on bladeforums. http://www.bladeforums.com/forums/showthread.php?t=796643 EDIT: I 've also got a different anvil, a bit larger around 160lbs, with a nice conical horn but no tail, from the early to mid 1700s Very cube shaped. I havent posted it for sale anywhere but it's potentially available too.
  3. good old 20 mule team borax from the laundry isle at walmart =)
  4. This whole year i've had far too little time in the shop to do much of anything, but I finished another knife. Cable damascus sgian dubh 8 cm blade 9 cm curly maple handle (1cm brass center, 8cm of wood) full flat grind
  5. The forum is yelling at me to post something whenever I visit... so here are some one-piece blacksmith roses that I made this weekend. I like to give the stems an almost spiky texture top and bottom fullers to make them look more organic. It's not quite forging a thorn on them, but i think it makes a nice effect.
  6. Fisher was the last to be casting iron anvils with steel faces, and they've been out of business for over 40 years
  7. I weld a lot of cable, once you know how, it's pretty easy. The two big things are getting the cable clean, and getting it hot enough. You can clean the cable in the forge, with a lot of wire brushing, heating, and fluxing. You'll be able to tell when it's clean by when you stop getting a bunch of crud out when you brush it. Heat is the most important part. My guess is you're not near hot enough. At forge welding temp you cant look in the forge, it hurts your eyes, and you will get sunburn standing in front of the forge for too long. Good eye protection from UV is important, you dont realize how much you're giving off when you forge weld until your forehead is bright red the next day and starts to peal. When your forge is at the point where you cant really look in it, the cable when its' the right temp should just about 'disappear' into the forge, you'll know it's the same temp as the forge. At this point the flux should be a slick glassy coat over the cable. That's the point of the flux actually, to coat it and prevent oxygen from getting inside. When you're setting the weld, a twist works fine, but the important thing is, do your first weld, and then brush it off quickly with a wire brush, re-flux, and get it back in the forge again before it cools down much at all. Be quick about it, don't allow excessive fire scale to form (as you've got a lot of surface area due to the strands) Once the initial weld is set, take your hammer... put it aside, grab a hammer half the size. Trust me, do this. You do NOT want to hit hard at all. You will not be doing any 'forging' blows for a while. Now while at a welding heat still, with your light hammer, follow along the twisted strands of the cable, moving from the back to the tip in quick light blows, twisting the cable to keep your blows on one strand. then go to the next strand. When you're losing heat, brush it off again with your wire brush, reflux and get it back to welding heat. You'll repeat this several times, and as you do it you'll be able to feel the cable consolidating and solidifying under the hammer. Eventually you'll start to hear the difference as your anvil starts to ring through the light blows on the cable, that's the indication that you're basically solid. Only when you reach this point should you pick back up your normal forging hammer to work on the billet and draw it out. After you do a few of these you'll get a good feel for it. It can also help, when you're doing the hammering along the strands, if you use a bottom half circle swage of a slightly smaller size than the cable you are welding. A good swage block with a series of half circles is great because as the cable consolidates you can keep using the progressively smaller sizes to cradle the cable. The bottom swage will help prevent any accidental 'blow out' from too hard of a blow while the weld is being set, and can help you keep the cable in place for faster more efficient work while at welding heat.
  8. Pretty good that it's victorian but pre-dates the georgian era ! that must make it an oddity ! =D
  9. for non-threaded things, like freeing up old hand crank drill presses and the like, I just use a lot of wd-40 over time, for threads that are rusted up, i like liquid wrench
  10. Someday (not any time soon unfortunately) I'm going to have my own anvil cast, but it wont be 'just' an anvil, it'll be a piece of sculpture too. It's been too long since people made art with their tools, and I want an anvil with a face on the side and stuff >_< This desire was more or less inspired by the post vise at the Higgins Armory in Worcester MA.
  11. I just built a bellows a few weeks ago, couldn't find any good 'complete' plans so I just winged it using pictures from this site and others. It came out fine but wasn't pushing as much air as i felt it should because the top wasn't 'ratcheting' up as i pumped it. I used canvas for the sides, and bellows themselves were pretty large and the planks thick. Turned out I had the opposite problem that many old bellows have, where they need to put a rock on the top to push the top plank down faster, and instead I had to put a pulley on the top and hang a 3lb hammer head from it to reduce the total weight of the top panel by about 3 lbs and now it works just great. I made the 3 panels of mine out of 1x12s joined side to side with dowel joints. I made the stand to hold it so that it comes apart into several pieces and lays flat in my truck for transportation I didn't remember to take many in progress pictures http://www.tharkis.com/images/hi/nebspring09/DSCN0078%20(Large).JPG http://www.tharkis.com/images/hi/nebspring09/DSCN0079%20(Large).JPG http://www.tharkis.com/images/hi/nebspring09/DSCN0080%20(Large).JPG http://www.tharkis.com/images/hi/nebspring09/DSCN0081%20(Large).JPG and lastly the finished product, overall 5 feet long, 32 inches wide, and both the top and bottom sides open up quite deep to ~22 inches each. One thing that I did was put my center valves for the middle leaf and the bottom leaf on removable pannels so that I can get inside and service them in the future. http://www.tharkis.com/images/temp/bellows.jpg
  12. That's where an induction forge shines the most, they're incredible for repeated applications heating the same object over and over. Pretty impressive pile there !
  13. Just dont use a large hammer on it, it's not hard to break the horn or heel off of those small 20 or 30 lbs anvils. That one is in great condition!
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