Jump to content
I Forge Iron

kevin1050

Members
  • Posts

    94
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by kevin1050

  1. The forge I got off of eBay from CK Forge. It works well for the most part. I did find out that he was using a smaller supply line and when I replaced it with a true 1/4 line the heat went up. Plus I added a coat of Plistix to help with the heat and life of the ins-wool.

    I think I figured out what to do. I am going to cut out the middle section of the pipe, seal the ends, drill holes, weld on the new pipe nipples, add a ball valve to the new one, and T the supply line. Plus cut out a plug from some spare ins-wool so i don't get the chimney effect from the unused burner.

    Thanks for the feedback and advice.

  2. Made this one for a guy at work. Wrap was done by my friend Stewart. Blade is about 1'' wide by 6.5'' long. Forged out of 5160 with a paracord wrap handle. Left some forge marks on the blade as the guy liked them and wanted some on the blade. This is the second one I have done in this style.

    post-13355-0-26124500-1339087556_thumb.j

  3. Hello all,

    I have a two burner forge that has one input for the gas and no option to use one burner. The set up looks like stone henge with the burners forming the uprights with the supply pipe that crosses the top of both. What I want to do is to be able to switch from using one burner to two. I know it will involve cutting the cross pipe and plugging the new open ends. My question is what do I use for new gas inputs? Mig tips? What size? Drill a hole in the cross pipe and weld in the tip? See picture.

    Any input would be greatly appreciated,
    Kevin

    post-13355-0-55522300-1338820061_thumb.j

  4. I did a layer of ITC over Plistix. But, I put it directly on the inswool. The inswool really sucked up the Plistix and the ITC went on very easy over that. Now I am waiting for everything to dry out so I can fire it up! Plus Wayne is a really nice guy to deal with. He has put up with a couple of my phone calls and his wife is nice to talk to also!

  5. As a new smith myself, 3 yrs, the best advice I can give is:

    There is no substitute for hands on learning with someone more experienced. Take classes, ask another local smith if you can work with him. The guild near me does a knife class every year. I attended last year and plan on taking it again.

    Build your library. The books by Jim Hrisoulas are a great start.

    Practice, practice, practice. Mastering your basic blacksmithing skills are a must.

    Ask lots of questions.

    Join forums to research. I am sure a lot of questions have been already answered here and in other sites.

    Show your work to other bladesmiths for feedback.

    Time. It will take time to build your skills up. Don't try and rush it.

    good Luck and keep at it.

×
×
  • Create New...