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I Forge Iron

stuartthesmith2

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Everything posted by stuartthesmith2

  1. that anvil wouldn't even make a good boat anchor, it would scare away the catfish!
  2. yes, that one................I defy anyone to find an uglier anvil!
  3. on ebay, there is a buy it now listing for a 167 lb what appears to be a hay budden for 250 dollars, which is a steel steal! If nobody buys it in the next two days in here, I will drive up there and buy it from the guy!
  4. some guy in blacksburg virginia is selling a nice either peter wright or henry wright(peter's brother) 402 pound anvil for 800 dollars, which seems like a good deal.......the guy lost the letter from postman identifying his anvil as a probable "henry wright", but this anvil looks like a sweet one.
  5. There is an anvil posted in rogers, AR, on craiglist that is one of the prettiest anvils I have ever seen advertised online. It is over 450 pounds, a double horned european anvil in darn near perfect shape. The owner is not posting a price.
  6. I just saw the ugliest anvil in human history up for sale on craigslist. It is in columbus, ohio.........it takes ugly anvils exponentially to a new level!
  7. that gorgeous anvil is in grand rapids.....forgot to put that on the last message, lol
  8. there is a gorgeous anvil up for sale on craigslist for under 400 dollars, it looks prisine
  9. there is a 200 lb. anvil up for sale in new york city today for 200 bucks, seems like a good deal, especially for new york!
  10. Could someone with experience in forging monel please give a synopsis of this area?
  11. there is a guy selling a blacksmith forge and andvil(misspelled) on craigslist in minneapolis,minn. for about 300 bucks.....someone please take advantage of his misspelling
  12. some guy in hartford, connecticutt has a 500 lb anvil for sale in decent shape for 1200 bucks......it is almost worth it.....lol
  13. the gentleman selling this hammer is also selling the same hammer on craigslist, and posted a video of such. As you can see in the video, this hammer works excellently http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rVb29L_TDsI
  14. In 1977, when I bought my williams 150 pound hammer, I had to pour babbit bearings. Other than oil and grease, this is the only maintainance I have done since then on this hammer. It is very similar to the champion trip hammer design, just as durable, and just as versitile........I highly recommend this hammer that some guy is selling right now on ebay! I run my hammer at up to four strokes a second, and I have done some hard pounding on my machine over the years. Nuff said!
  15. There is a magnificent trip hammer for sale on ebay right now, with only one day and change left. It is a Williams 100 lb. trip hammer. Some guy in wisconsen has it for sale, for $2000 bucks. I have an identical hammer in my shop, a williams 150 lber, which is 1/12 times as big as the one he has for sale. This hammer hits harder than any of the "popular" hammers, and is easy to maintain. I have been using my williams hammer for 30 some odd years, banging out thousands of slate shingle rippers, brick hammers, etc. The williams hammer is a workhorse!. The guy on ebay selling it doesn't realize what a treasure he has. I am hoping someone on iforgeiron grabs this hammer, it is a leaf-spring actuated hammer.
  16. I hope this tip helps a lot of blacksmiths working in cold climates. One of the tools that I manufacture are slate shingle rippers. My shop is in what is considered the "snow belt", high in the mountains of Northeastern Pennsylvania. At night, during the winter, it sometimes goes down to 20 degrees below zero farenheit. The handles of these tools are mild steel, forge welded to a 1080 blade which is drawn out under a triphammer and then flattened at the far end into a blade. As I was finishing forging out these high carbon blades, I would toss them on the floor to cool before grinding the blades later. After grinding and finishing them, usually about 100 of these tools at one time, I would send them out to a heat treater. To my absolute shock, a batch came back, ALL cracked on the blades where they have the groove for cutting nails going through slate shingles. I had forged these tools on a day in which the thermometer plummetted to 18 degrees below zero. After finishing the forgings, I had thrown these tools on the COLD FLOOR. The heat treater explained to me that at those ambient temperatures, the floor itself had HARDENED the blades unevenly, causing stresses in the forging. He recommended that I buy 100 lbs. of playground sand and put it in a large container. He suggested that before I forge any slate rippers in cold weather, that I heat up, in my forge, a six inch by six inch by six inch big block of steel welded to a long handle to a yellow heat, then immerse it into the sandbox, stirring the sand around this big block of hot steel to heat all the sand in the box. Then, as I finish forging slate rippers, he suggested that I "quench" the still-warm blades into the extremely hot sand, allowing the rippers to slowly cool down over the period of about 8 to ten hours. By annealing the blades in this manner, it eliminated my problem! I never had a problem with my forgings cracking like that again from accidentally hardening them on my cold floor. I hope this tip helps some people.
  17. this young man needs a big anvil!
  18. My blacksmith shop is in the basement of a 40x60 cowbarn that I converted into a shop. Most of the floor is concrete. Thirty five years ago, I removed the cow stantions in favor of shop space for forges, triphammers, and all other manner of blacksmithania. On part of my floor, it was dirt, rather than concrete. For more than thirty years, I have been mixing clinker, ash, and playground sand to make a very nice floor in that section of the barn. Concrete floors stress a blacksmith's legs, so the composite of clinker, ash, and sand make a wonderful floor for a blacksmith shop. You could imagine how much clinker and ash I have created over three decades! My next project will be to clinker my driveway down to the doors of my shop!!! That should take a couple of decades too!
  19. cobbleskill, ny craigslist has a real nice hay budden at a reasonable price
  20. there is a real nice 179 pound hay budden for sale in syracuse, ny on craigslist
  21. on craigslist there is a 149 lb BEAUTIFUL anvil for sale for 275 dollars
  22. forge without leaving hammermarks,,,,,,flatters are unnecessary if you have hammer angle control, which takes practice.............you will eventually learn to forge without leaving hammer marks.............it takes a ton of practice.....practice...........practice...........
  23. there is a beautiful hay budden 252 pounder in ashland, nebraska, for 500 dollars.....................
  24. If you are willing to drive to pennsylvania, I will get you an anvil
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