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I Forge Iron

doc

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Posts posted by doc

  1. Coat your mandrel with a good layer of soot using you acetylene torch. This will act as a release agent to keep the babbitt from adhering to the mandrel. Remember that the babbitt will still shrink some and become mechanically tight to your mandrel.

     

    As far as the taper? I'd give the required clearance on the smaller diameter and worry about the taper by machining it in when I turned the final dimension in the lathe.  

  2. I don't think they had sales men trucking around sample vises in the mid 18th century but I might be wrong.  :wacko:

     

    Nice find Tim. The shape of the jaws indicate it was made as a bench or finisher/filers vise. Seems to be just what you need for that white work you've been playing with lately.

  3. IT'S a leg vise! The majority of this type of vise were never marked by their makers until the middle to end of the 19th century. It looks like it's in good shape, don't worry about it's heritage. Set it up and put it to work.

  4. Brass and copper hammers are used often for bending forgings when wanting to leave as few hammer marks as possible. But trying to straighten springs even hot requires a harder faced hammer. As said above pulling a spring on a piece of pipe slid over a rod in the vise will work for smaller dia springs. Larger springs can be partially opened with forks and final straightening done by clamping in the vise.

  5. Once you open the first page,go to it's bottom and click on "structure" the open drop down of "plates" and choose the one you'd like to see. They are then sequential form where you started.

     

    Love the hand crank saw mills!! 

  6. There are two different manufacturers of Ped anvils now. One is Rigid of Europe and the others are made for Peddinghaus in Turkey. You can find them both on Pieh Tools web site. I've had a Ped

     

    for more than 40 years with no problems other than expected wear,but it's not the same anvil as is made today. That said I can't really speak for what is made now. 

  7. The other thing that is interesting about the chamfer besides it's being only on the front edge is that its not continuous. It has what is called a stop check above the chamfer. This is an affectation from 16th century house framing that was used as a decoration on much of that periods iron hardware ( think dovetail hinges) to aesthetically connect the iron with the rest of the house. 

     

    I find this interesting as it seems sort of a decorative through back since the vise is certainly from a later period.

  8. I agree with Larry,

     

    But I think with most things except the very basics  ( nails,hooks, simple scrolls etc;) it will take more than ten or twelve attempts. At this point you may understand the principles, but you probably won't be very proficient at it. You'll truly have to make 50 or 100 of an item before you can do it effectively.You may also find that if you don't make an item for a while that when you attempt it again you might have to make two or three just to "warm up" to the standard you've set for yourself.

     

     If you have no one to work with or learn from remember to be self-critical and also analyze your work as you go along.Try to discover why what you attempted didn't work. Or if it did seem to work, don't be so pleased with yourself that you'll be satisfied with a low quality item or one that has taken an inordinate amount of time for the result.

     

     When you use the procedures of another smith to make an item remember that this may only be a starting point for you.Once you'er able to produce this item well using an-others steps, don't be afraid to try it your own way. You may find that by changing the sequence of steps it becomes easier or quicker for you or perhaps you'll even discover an entirely new and better way.

     

     This method might or might not work for you but it is the method I've used to teach myself for the past 40 yrs as a professional smith and still use everyday. This is a skill that no one can live long enough to learn everything about. In fact I believe a life time allows us only to scratch the surface.One other thing. by being aware you'll find that you probably will learn as much about yourself from blacksmithing as you will about smithing.

  9. If your "bushings" look like lead they are probably not either. It is most likely a Babbitt bearing. You may find it difficult to install a bronze bushing into an opening that was made for a poured bearing. Then again it might not be hard at all depending on how the bearing support is made.

     

    Pictures would help! 

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