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I Forge Iron

ThomasPowers

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Posts posted by ThomasPowers

  1. Might want to check out how others in limited spaces work; Japan, Europe, etc.  I once built a single soft firebrick forge run by a cheap plumbing torch so I could forge in my basement during the winter.  Did the nails for a Mastermyr tool chest and a lot of hack silver.

  2. Cost is tricky; example: which is cheaper over the long run: a free car that gets 10mpg and uses premium gas or a US$2000 car that gets 30 mpg and uses regular unleaded gas? 

    I've noticed that professional tennis players used to go back to wooden rackets when they get tennis elbow issues...

  3. For "Ancient" we generally consider Greek and Roman era and earlier.  May I commend to your attention: "Egyptian Metalworking and Tools", Bernd Scheel, Shire Egyptology ISBN 0 7478 0001 4  copy right 1989

    The Berlin Foundry Cup, early 5th century BC, also has a number of metal working tools shown on it but mainly bronze casting stuff.

  4. My cane tip is rubber? and held on with a stainless steel pipe clamp currently.  I did cast a tip from a deer's hoof in brass once; thought it would look appropriate to have a series of cloven hoofprints paralleling my footprints....

  5. You have some biased preconceptions: why would the size of the bolt indicate carbon content?   Why is free vegetable oil from a fast food fryer more expensive than motor oil?  I have a book on Hunting Weapons from the middle ages to the 20th century.  My local FREE public library will ILL books they do not have locally; have you tried?

    Scrapyard Rules: test all "found"  metal BEFORE using for carbon content and heat treating requirements---only takes a few "oopses" to see that this is the fast and cheap way to get good results with found metal.

    Good Luck!

  6. Some friends at church have a little woodstove cleaning tool they have been taking back and forth from Cornwall UK to Socorro NM USA.  I duplicated it for them and now they have retired to the UK for good.  (Taking my version as it was "nicer" than the commercial version from the UK---twist in the handle and a square tenon.)

  7. My sister graduated with a Chemistry Degree and got a job with a large multinational company.  To celebrate they took a vacation in the Caribbean where she contracted Hepatitis from eating shellfish. She was told to tell her company that she needed to avoid chemicals for several years....they put her   as supervisor on one of the lines that was having some issues.  She identified it as several workers not working.  When she talked with them they told her that they couldn't be fired due to the complexity of the firing process.  After the third one was fired; her nickname was "the axe lady"  and the line was running better and morale was higher!  Turns out the rest of the folk wanted to do a good job; but the dead weights had been dragging them down... 

  8. And to have several different ones so that visitors/students can find the *right* one for their use too.  As I "de-accession" my kit I have been giving away stuff along with selling and the more they buy the more I load them up as well...an old family friend is due to come over soon.  I hope his back is stout!

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