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I Forge Iron

Tim McCoy

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Posts posted by Tim McCoy

  1. A visit to the saw bones is in order just to be sure what it is, but if it is gout (which I have dealt with for over 30 years) there's a home remedy that can help enormously. You can google gout for descriptions of symptoms and causes ... you'll get over a millions hits ... there are several drugs that doc's prescribe to help with cleaning out your blood system and most of them work. The cheapest and one of the easiest fixes is black cherry juice. Health food stores usually have it in stock as a concentrate ... follow the directions for usage EXACTLY ... an "overdose" will give you the "Rocky Mountain Quickstep". Or many grocery stores carry "Just Black Cherry" juice made by R. W. Knudson ... drink a whole bottle of that (32 ounces) over a 12 hour period and you should get relief ... but go see a doctor first.

  2. I know that this is not a blacksmithing tool, but a tool is a tool and for $25 I couldn't resist this pre-1956 Dewalt MBC-29 radial arm saw. It runs and has all its parts and the adjustments work, so maybe a 9" metal cutting blade will let me cut some metal from time to time ... found this at a house where an older guy has a yard sale about once a month where I have found files, nippers, a 16# Atha sledge and various other goodies over the last 2 years ... had this thing setting out in front and I just couldn't pass it up for the price. Heck, if nothing else it ought to be good for a trade!! There is no base and the cutting table is way wrong, but it has that heavy cast iron arm and it runs quiet even at being nearly 70 years old ... no AMF stickers here!

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  3. I hope that I have put this in the right section ...

    Ran across this link that does a very decent job of explaining the different spark results created when we run something against a grinder looking for an answer about what it the heck it is. I looked for a while with the search feature, but couldn't find what I need ... maybe this will help someone identify that favorite scrounged chunk of metal.


    https://secure.wikim...i/Spark_testing

    :rolleyes:

  4. Thomas - yep lump charcoal is the way to go ... ran out of mesquite charcoal so have to go to restaurant supply next pay day.

    Thanks for all the comments. Hopefully newbies can see that they don't have to be limited because they can't have a full fledged shop. I keep in mind a video I saw of a guy in Africa hammering on some unknown piece of steel with a small boy pumping a skin bag for a forge air supply. They did not wait until they had everything just right. I've paid a great deal of attention to the senior members here and have tried to embrace their constant reminders to others to "get something hard, build a fire and beat something until you learn how to make things" Be in the action mode, planning can only go so far. Mat is right, you can't always get what you want, but if you try sometimes . . .

  5. Will having the fire steel inside the 550 cord wraping make accessing it a challenge? Each time you need the steel you have to at least partially unwrap it ... perhaps you could punch a hole in the reverse bend to stick the fire steel into so that it still fits between the bent ends of the handle and leave it just about 1/2" proud of the hole - have it wedged into the hole - just a thought.

  6. I built this smithy about 18 months ago. Nothing used was purchased ... all scrounged or donated. Built the walls as tip up units. Used asphalt cut outs from a dump site for most of the flooring. Found a pick up load of cement forming plywood - has a form of formica as covering to allow a smoother finish. Door from sauna ... roofing tile from extra that my brother had and all nails taken from found nail gun strips ... and so on. Cheap, strong, drafty ... 7x7' interior dimension. I work from the center of the room ... everything is within easy reach. All stock that is over a couple foot long is outside. Small and efficient, but no room for any thing you could consider big. No power and no heater or A/C. Have to do any summertime work before 10AM as the heat here in the high desert can get to over 118. Anvil is a loaner - seems to be a vulcan. Forge is a large brake disk set on diamond plate (its upside down) and cast 2" pipe connected with tin cans tied on with tie wire (found that too) - Champion blower ... stainless steel slack tub with Superquench and in one corner we have used motor oil for quenching also. The window is some wire mesh I found in the road and the lumber is all scrounged from a dump site. The fire brick on the forge is from a demolished house ... big stuff! The punches and chisels are all yard sale items at 50 cents each. Hammers are all yard sale stuff too - except for a HF hammer that has been rehandled. Out front sits a champion forge that is cracked. The smithy sets within a small raised bed garden that has been unattended this past winter ... nearest the smithy there is a coal/charcoal bin. Have to use charcoal when there is no wind ... coal smoke causes complaints from the neighbors.

    It doesn't take much in the way of money to have a shop or tools or supplies or something to burn ... just a willingness to scrounge, use some imagination and be dedicated to getting what you need to learn how to be a blacksmith. Today was my first fire in almost a year as I was busy with tending to an ill wife. She's better and now the shop is open again and I spent some time practicing pointing up several different sizes of that nemisis rebar. I really have missed holding a hammer.

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  7. Like many others have said before, "God, I love this site!"

    Glenn, your thoughts about ventilation are well taken. I understand that a space with cracks and holes is not "ventilated" if the air within it stands stagnant! Seen more than one article about men dying while being trapped in a hole in the ground with stagnant air - being asphyxiated. The top of the hole was ventilated in a sense, but most inefficiently! Routing the exhaust gasses from the rocket stove through a space with some type of piping could work ... but then I gotta go outside every once in a while to feed the beasty.

    The question was about had anyone had any experience with a rocket stove as heater ... seems that the result of all this centers around personal choice. Like many projects discussed here, this one may not work. It could work, but without another's experience as a time saver (not having to reinvent the wheel thing) it may require too much experimenting on my end to make it worth while. Guess I could take that 15 gallon drum I have, cut to half size and make it into a heater, unless someone knows where I could find a very small wood stove. Thanks everyone for helping to sort this out. Group inductive and deductive reasoning ... God I love this site!

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