Jump to content
I Forge Iron

Nakedanvil - Grant Sarver

Members
  • Posts

    3,117
  • Joined

  • Last visited

3 Followers

Profile Information

  • Gender
    Not Telling
  • Location
    Right here at OCP Galactic Headquarters!

Converted

  • Location
    In the shadow of Mount Rainier in Washington State
  • Biography
    Blacksmith last 35+ years
  • Interests
    ALL metalworling
  • Occupation
    Owner OCP Tool Co. Mfg of the worlds best Blacksmith tools

Recent Profile Visitors

25,035 profile views
  1. I was interested in your induction forges but it seems like you and OCP tool are no longer active.

    1. Charles R. Stevens

      Charles R. Stevens

      I may well be wrong but If memory serves, Seldom is working the Great Forge in the afterlife. 

    2. Airyk21

      Airyk21

      Thank you.

  2. No more than 400º. A lot of gas...........or a few pieces of wood.
  3. Good points Matt! Yeah, we should use oxidizing and reducing (and neutral) rather than rich and lean. Rich and lean describe the combustion while oxidizing and reducing describe their effect.
  4. Yeah, some folks have referred to my tongs as "ergonomic tongs" (popular moniker I guess), but I prefer what one smith called them many years ago; Eye sweet and hand friendly.
  5. If you don't know what you want to specialize in, just do everything you're able to. It'll come to you one day. Needs to be something you enjoy AND has enough potential to support you the way you require. Grant's #1 rule for success: Start out doing what everyone else is doing. At some point, start doing what no one else is doing.
  6. Pretty rare in the US with the unguided ram. The Brits often call this a "Rigby" type. Williams & White made similar ones.
  7. When calculating the weight look underneath. Most have a skirt about six-inches high and are only around 2" thick on the rest with a little ribbing. Some are solid. I had one that was kinda beat up and I flipped it over. It was solid and was machined on the other side too! Weighed 4,200lbs. 5 X 5.
  8. Nope! The frequency controls the RPM on any induction motor, number of phases has nothing to do with it.
  9. This fits what I have always understood of "killing" steel Background During the steel making process, oxygen may become dissolved in the liquid metal. During solidification, the dissolved oxygen can combine with carbon to form carbon monoxide bubbles. The carbon is added to the steel as an alloying element. The carbon monoxide bubbles are often trapped in the casting and can act as initiation points for failure. How Killed Steels are Produced and Their Advantages Formation of the carbon monoxide bubbles can be eliminated through the addition of deoxidising agents such as aluminium, ferrosilicon and manganese. In the case of aluminium, the dissolved oxygen reacts with it to form aluminium oxide (Alumina, Al2O3). The formation of alumina not only prevents the formation of bubbles or porosity, but the tiny particles or inclusions also pin grain boundaries during heat treatment processes, preventing grain growth. Completely deoxidised steel are known as “killed steels”. They have a more uniform analysis and are relatively free from ageing. For a given carbon and manganese content, killed steels are usually harder then rimmed steels. Disadvantages The disadvantage of using killed steels is they often display deep pipe shrinkage. Steels That are Typically Killed Steel that are generally killed include: • Steels with carbon contents greater then 0.25% • All forging grades of steel • Structural steels with carbon content between 0.15 to 0.25% • Some special steel in the lower carbon ranges Reference: http://www.azom.com/article.aspx?ArticleID=1697
  10. Hammers and presses are like some women. When a press says "no" it means "no". With a hammer, you can keep coaxing it along till you get what you want.
×
×
  • Create New...