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I Forge Iron

rasklking

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Everything posted by rasklking

  1. OUCH! I hope that guy's OK! You can really get hurt when you fall and bump your head really hard.......
  2. I picked up a 150 pound Mousehole in amazing condition a few months ago at a farm auction. Paid 200 bucks for it. :D
  3. I use a mixture of boiled linseed oil, turpentine, bees wax, Johnson Paste Wax and some Japan Drier. Heat the piece to black hot and apply the mixture (which when all is combined makes a paste) and wipe off the excess. You end up with a durable rust resistant finsish that you can polish with a soft cloth when it's "cured".
  4. I generally keep a piece of wood handy that I can put under the piece and above the collar. A lot of folks end up over-tightening the vise when they do that kind of work and end up with rounded threads on the vise screw. It's simple, but it works. :)
  5. :huh: I need to fetch me a pair of them! I could use'em ta grab my youngins' by the head and dip'em in the pond on bath day!
  6. I like working wrought Iron because it's crazy easy to forge weld. In fact, you can't leave two pieces in the fire too long or they'll seek each other out and weld themselves together. OK, maybe that's a little much, but you get the picture. :D
  7. :D My dear wife walked by while I was watching that video. She stopped to watch it for a few seconds and I pointed at the power hammer. She read my mind and said, "nope" and walked off. <_<
  8. A hood is the way to go. I've never had my nose bleed from the smoke but those black boogers can be a bit bothersome. :unsure:
  9. is throwin' a fit and ain't fit to throw one.

  10. My 12 yeard old son went to a hammer-in with me last year and he made the observation, "I noticed that just about everyone here's missing a finger and they all stand real close when they talk." <_<
  11. ....you run into the devil and he remarks, "Hey, we have the same cologne!"
  12. Post vises and anvils. I just can't bring myself to get rid of'em!
  13. Jump! It rare to run into a deal like that these days!
  14. I agree with Bob. The first anvil I used 10 years ago was a die from a tool making operation. It's heavey, it has a flat surface and it's hardened. I still have it and my son's using now. I suspect that thing'll outlast most anvils on the market. I've found a few good anvils at farm auctions and I run across one now and then at antique shops. The ones at the auctions around here can run in price from crazy cheap to out-right over-priced. Trick is, keep your eyes open:othey turn up in odd places sometimes.
  15. rasklking

    DSC_0069

    From the album: Philly Museum of Art

    Andiron from Venice made in the 1400's
  16. rasklking

    DSC_00681

    From the album: Philly Museum of Art

    Detail of candleabrum
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