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I Forge Iron

billyO

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    Portland, OR
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    as always
    peace and love
    billyO

    Because I am proud,
    I am ashamed.
    Because I am ashamed,
    I am proud.

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  1. As a former Physical Therapist, this is true. As is the fact that an ever-increasing number of hospitals and doctor's offices, as well as more and more industries and business in general, are financed by private equity where it seems the only thing that's important is increasing returns for investors. This has driven away a lot of practitioners who got into the business because we liked helping people, not because we wanted a large salary. So instead of practitioners who spend their time improving their skills in treating dysfunction and disease, what you are left with is a bunch of practitioners who are thinking primarily about how their decisions affect their reimbursement rate, not on what's the best for the patient. Oh, and let's not forget that these same private equity firms hire managers who are only interested in numbers and force practitioners into unrealistic metrics, like maintaining an 85% productivity rate, which means that we have to be able to bill for 85% of the time we spent with the patient. Rant over, go forge!
  2. Hello all. I hope the warmer summers are treating everyone else better than us here in the PNW without A/C... I recently was given the opportunity to do a large sculptural commission with the instructions that "money is no object". After a little discussion, it looks like the customer is willing to buy our shop a forging press as a deposit, so which one? I have quite a bit of experience with using Uncle Al's 25-ton H-frame and with Coal Ironworks 16-ton and 25-ton, but most of that work was for making damascus billets and canisters, and outside of speed, there wasn't much of a difference in their abilities to forge billets and kitchen knives. I've heard a lot of good things about the Gilmore 50-ton press at the NWBA conferences over the years, but I'm not sure if this is because they are superior machines or merely because he is a fellow longtime member of the NWBA... I'm also a little concerned that the H-frame might limit access to the dies for some operations while making sculptural pieces. Has anyone with an H-frame press had any issuse with the frame getting in the way, limiting access to the dies? I appreciate any input. Thanks and stay cool!
  3. Do a search for san-mai. It sounds like this is what you folks are talking about. I'll warn you that san mai construction is a lot harder than it looks. It takes quite a bit of skill to keep the core (edge) centered in the blade during forging.
  4. Based on this, I'd like to change my answer to: you got lucky and probably ripped them off. Unless you did some testing and made sure the steel hardened adequately. But I guess if the buyer remains happy...then you might not have screwed them.
  5. Sweet looking package, John. With the box, hinges and castings, no wonder....
  6. If both parties are happy, then I'd say so.
  7. How deep does that go? If this is going to go into the scrap bin anyway, I'd cut the billet in half, polish the cut ends, and etch to see how deep the un-welded portion is. If you didn't grind the sides completely flush before welding the billet together, you will get that on the edges, but it might not be deep enough to worry about. only if the weld was bad enough for scale to have formed between the layers.
  8. Depending on the price, it might be worth looking into. Especially for folks who don't like the maintenance of plain carbon steel damascus. Is there any (or plans to look into) food safe information for kitchen cutlery? There are already other relatively cheap coatings that work plenty well for damascus. GunKote by KG industries comes to mind, and hard to beat $25 for a jar that will last hundreds of blades.....
  9. Looks good. But I'd still make the guy a knife in trade (or thanks) for the cable....
  10. billyO

    Fish mouth

    I'd suggest trying this. A lot of folks do what's in the first picture, but that almost always causes a fish-mouth. By starting the taper as in the second picture, you are going to push metal into the 'fish mouth' and will be able to finish the point without having to cut off any material. Basically you are setting up the point before finishing it, or as some smiths would say, doing the pre-form first.
  11. Hi Alan. Sorry I didn't see this earlier (I don't peruse this site much anymore). I'm not exactly sure what you are asking (feel free to redirect me), but I've got a couple thoughts: First - it took quite a bit of fiddling with the needle valves to get the propane flow set properly for it to work well. And I've had to continue to fiddle with the idle valve occasionally. Secondly - I often close down the air baffle on the blower because I've been doing almost exclusively damascus since I did this modification, which might be why I have had to continue to fiddle with the needle valve more than I should. And (thirdly) now that I think about it, it's been about 3-4 months since I've switched it to auto, because I've been trying to minimize scale formation while forging.... Hopefully that gives you some useful information, but I'm afraid it doesn't.
  12. Yep, my bad, sorry 'bout that, Thomas. Thanks Glenn. And I'm sorry you felt you had to take time out of your day to respond, both here and in the message. I completely understand not wanting this site to turn into a free advertising space, and I appreciate your efforts to maintain that. So just to be clear, if another offer like this comes up in the future, we're to post something in the tailgate section about "XXXX is advertised in XXXXX craigslist"?
  13. Thanks for the words of encouragement, folks, but they were unnecessary. I'm not that easily offended, merely stating the facts. I'm not sure how you jumped to this assumption, but I'll resist the urge to rant back.
  14. Yes, Glenn, it was. Apparently I got a warning and point was deducted, even though I have no financial interest and was merely trying to help folks out....so much for trying to be helpful. This is one of the reasons why I limit my participation on this forum.
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