Jump to content
I Forge Iron

Stash

2021 Donor
  • Posts

    887
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by Stash

  1. The concept will work fine, but watch out- the vise might be cast iron and you'll likely make a mess of things trying to weld to it. Weld a plate to a shank and drill the plate to mount the vise to. When you do have space for a bench or vise stump, the shank won't be in your way.

    Steve

  2. You got it- the arm rids a cam on the main shaft. The little flappy thing on the top of the arm advances the top gear, which drives down the chuck shaft. It then ratchets back- there should be a compression spring to push it back. There is also a small thumb screw to adjust how far back the arm is pushed by the spring. I can dial mine in so the ratchet backs up from 1 to 3 teeth in the gear. 1 tooth is minimum return for larger bits, up to 3 teeth for small bits. It is a fun little toy in my shop- people are fascinated by how effectively it works. I am pragmatic, though and also have a new fangled drill press with an electrical motor. Finding parts could be tougher- post a listing in the tailgating section, for starters.

    Steve

  3. Looks like you got yourself a Fisher- cast iron base, tool steel top and horn. I understand the top can be pretty brittle, but we're looking at a break and de-lamination. What is left gives plenty to work with, as long as the top isn't loose. Tap it with a small ball pien and listen- if it's coming loose, it will rattle or sound hollow. Fishers don't ring, so don't expect that. If the top is good, you did an ok deal. Clean it up with a wire brush and polish the top with hot steel. You should find a date on the back under the tail, and usually a weight on the front right foot- if it's 150# the stamp should have 15 on it. ( Actually not a stamp- it was stamped into the mold, so it will be raised). I usually put some boiled linseed oil on mine to keep it purdy. If the top is sound, you'll have a great anvil to work on.

    Steve

  4. I've told my family to not get me tools for Christmas or birthdays. I tend to have very specific needs, and don't want to have to ask for something like that, of someone who has no idea what I'm asking for. My wife tried, got something from e bay that was listed as a blacksmith tool and wasn't. It was still a nice gift, but didn't fit my needs. Like Glenn said, books are great- there's a lot of good stuff out there and I never get tired of reading them. How about a gift cert for a weekend of lessons? Membership in the local group? You could ask for a bag of coal or a tank of propane. If you know of something specific you need, give  the details or item number. I used to circle in crayon what I wanted from the Sears catalog. I still think books are best.

     

    Steve

  5. Oh yeah, a good time was had by all. I hope my parole officer doesn't see this- I'm not supposed to leave the county.

    The piece Andrew made today wasn't planned out ahead of time- he took a few minutes to sketch it out before the demo, and figured it out as he went. Start to finish in about 6 hrs or less.

    Thanks for documenting our fun, JW

    Steve

  6. You can get all the broken bits you want if you ask the right people. I rent a lot of equipment and when I return it, I talk to my buddy at the desk, or the guys back in the shop. They will point me in the right direction, even walking out there with me and helping me load my truck. It helps to provide coffee, donuts or some kind of liquid refreshment every now or then. Calling cold won't get you anything. You need to meet and get to know the people who have the real power.

     

    Steve

  7. I re-did a similar unit a few years back.It was a Champion, and did the wind- un wind thing Matto described. I was lucky enough to have the dried bits of leather, so I could figure that side of things. You are correct in the thought for the need of a ratchet mechanism. What the Champion had, and what I suspect you have is a mechanism inside the hub with a fixed gear on the shaft with a loose bearing (not sure of the proper term)  around it, with 3 milled slots, each slot had a loose  pawl beveled on the end. On the power stroke the pawl on top would drop by gravity onto the gear and power forward. On the return stroke the bevel on the pawl would simply ride over the gear teeth until it was time for the power stroke, drop down etc etc. I was missing one pawl- just filed a bevel on a piece of 1/4" square, or so, and fit it into the slot, freed up the other 2 pawls, wd40 on the whole thing, and put it back together. Worked a treat, pure simplicity, very functional and simple to figure out and fix.

    Looks to me like you pull the whole shaft and big wheel off, and carefully disassemble the hub, clean, free up and lube, put it back together. There were no boingy fly- aparty things for me- I just took it slow.

    Good luck

    Steve

    Now that I thought about it, the gear was in the outer diameter of the hub and the 'pawl bearing' rode inside.

  8. I would be a little hesitant to drive 3 hrs without having seen any pix, or without having any idea what ballpark he is in price-wise. A local guy lists anvils with the 'best offer accepted' statement, turns out he wants $6-7 per pound, but won't put a price in the ad. A PW in real nice shape could tempt a guy to ask for the moon, especially if he researches his pricing on ebay. I agree with Thomas with the $2-3 per# price- that is generally my max range but there are some crazy numbers out here.

     

    Steve

  9. Taking a tack to the portside. My wife learned do cook defensively. Her mother could burn water. She went the usual route- 'Joy of Cooking", Julia Child, and some of the other classics. She followed the recipes to the letter. She got pretty good, and that was one of the things that attracted me when she was in charge of commisary at the local theater  I worked in. Fast forward 32 + years. She still uses recipes- cookbooks, interweb, tv, whatever. But now the recipe is a suggestion. The basic concepts still apply- the chemical interactions, the timing, etc. Anytime she presents me with something new from a recipe she found, she will always say "but I changed this....."  Her experience has allowed her to make any recipe her own, and she does it almost intuitively. My waistline is a testament to her abilities. Yesterday she tried some no-bake cookies, but for some reason everything went pear-shaped. She thought a minute, realized that she had pretty much the dry ingredients for a baked cookie, made the rest up from experience, and we now have a batch of what she calls "Failure is an option chocolate cookies".  I'm a lucky lucky man. As I type this I'm smelling her version of some kind of slow roasted pork butt kinda thing.

    Steve

  10. I made a hot cut from a chunk of breaker bit- forged below the collar to fit the hardie hole, made the working end above, and it works a treat. Discussions on this forum have placed breaker bit from 1040 to 1050 or so. I forged it, and just normalized it. It will mark my (sacrificial) hammer with a mis strike and mugger up the edge, but a quick stroke with a file and I'm good to go.

     

    Steve

×
×
  • Create New...