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Blacksmithing T-shirts now available
I haven't been active on this site for years. I can on guess that it is because we made a move from Maine to North Carolina and that upset a lot of our routines. Well yesterday I was scheduled to participate in a local festival and while preparing for that I had to find the right clothing to wear. I planned to sell some of my products and do some blacksmith demonstration so it had to be blacksmith related. I came across several possibilities, one said I Forge Iron.com of the front which I had bought on this site years ago and recall only wearing once. So I picked it. The back says "Blacksmiths Without Borders" and has all the continents of the earth displayed. It brought some comments from folks who didn't realize such a thing could exist. In any case it brought me back here.
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Water barrel always gets rank
Huh, all this time I haven't worried about the quality of water in my bucket. It evaporates some, I refill it as necessary. Yes it's pretty grungy water and there is sediment on the bottom. I don't drink from it though. And it doesn't rust; it's a bucket the cat litter came in. I also haven't burned any holes in it.
- Metallurgical Coke in New England
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Preventing equipment sweat
I had the rusting problem in my old shop. When I built the new shop I installed a propane heater to maintain a minimum temperature of 42ºF in fall, winter and spring. This is working for me.
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Which smithing course conundrum
I agree with two guys ahead of me here. If you are self taught I would advise starting out in a blacksmithing introductory class. Your skill level might not be up to the demands of a tool making class. You can learn a lot from books and YouTube videos but there is nothing like face to face and hands on with some one really good. You can always go back later for the tool making class.
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Welding fumes are worse than we thought
I don't do any stick welding, just mig and tig, and generally work with only low carbon steel. I just looked up 1020 and it has 0.3 to 0.6% manganese. That doesn't seem like much compared to some of the electrodes, of which some have manganese oxide and ferromanganese 0 to 20% depending on the rod you select.
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Welding fumes are worse than we thought
So where is the manganese coming from? The base metal, the filler material, the flux?
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Forging a French Hinge
French was my first language but now I could only catch the occasional word. Just the same, I understood the blacksmithing. Thanks.
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Show Me Your Candle Holders
My concern with candle holders is that they be very stable; you don't want them falling over and burning the house down. Yesteryearforge, I really like your work. The copper is very attractive. I have made one of the Trillium candle holder and like that design very much. Thanks.
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Hay Budden
I wouldn't worry about a 1/16" sway in the middle.
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An early Christmas present to the newbies
Fabulous little project, but here it is Christmas eve! Well there are other holidays and events on the horizon. Thanks
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How much coal do I really need?
In my experience, for light forging I burn less than 2.5 pounds per hour when working steadily. I have an electric blower but shut off the air with a slide gate damper when no iron is in the fire. If I'm going to away from the fire for a while I shut off the blower to reduce the shop noise. In this area I can buy 50 LB bags of bituminus for $12.49 plus tax. Buying a whole pallet (50 bags) gives you a good discount.
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Few questions on some equipment
Remist17, by my calculation your hunk of steel (10x10x6) should weigh about 170 pounds. That's a pretty good weight for a starter anvil.
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Blacksmithing gems and pearls
When you are doing a demonstration at the fair, nearly everyone watching you has a grandfather who was a real blacksmith.
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Hammer Technique question
I don't know what you are making with this material but it sounds like a lot of work to get the size you want. If you are making a lot of pieces, I would consider buying stock of the right size (or nearly the right size) and going ahead from there.