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nonjic

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Everything posted by nonjic

  1. nonjic

    Fly Press Again

    brian , click back to page 1 of this thread, I posted a picture of the screw from the small sweeny & blocksage, with a steel rule next to it. Hope this helps some. ps, dont remember the old phones, im 32 :)
  2. nonjic

    Fly Press Again

    no one noticed my delibreate mistake on this one then..... :rolleyes: I meant 1/2" per quater turn...... o o o o p p p p s.
  3. Hofi, they wont be forgotten ! not sure Im confident enough to join you with the singing though ! (and it wouldnt be fair on the people listening with my singing voice ! Bob - 3 of the hammers were mine (the Anyangs a 15, 25 & 40kgs) , and one was a Rieuter (spelling?) that is Terry Clarkes. The 15 kg that can be seen in one of the photos is the one that I am lending to owen for his Forge In / Classes in March. - The 25 is now with Simon Lucas!
  4. watch ya dont give yourself CO poisioning closing off all the gaps to keep the noise out, its keeping all the bad stuff from your gasser in! - if you start to feel a bit dizzy / light headed get out in the fresh air for a bit ! You can also put some silicone sealant ( or similar caulking stuff from diy stores ) under the anvil to deaden the sound of it a bit. Try and let the hammer do the work rather than 'forcing it' edit - if you work over the back edge of the anvil a bit (so the steel has a much smaller contact area with the anvil & hammer) it will 'break down' alot faster.
  5. Great photos in the gallery Hofi - it was a great few days. I really like the work of the french ( the 'people' reaching around a globe ) There are no photos of you singing karaoke to 200 people at the party though :)
  6. its the noise a sheep makes here ! Hofi - Im quite good at crosswords but you are to cryptic for me tonight ! - I will look at your pictures in the gallery now , thanks :)
  7. nonjic

    1st knife

    not sure im gonna do a sheath for it, im skilless and time poor. Ive also got to give the knife away, its one of those 'in the hats' where everyone makes a mini, and then you post them on to each other - ill kinda miss it when its gone, but learnt alot making it (ie never do mini stuff, its much harder ) - Ill get somthing better back for it in exchange im sure !!!
  8. nonjic

    1st knife

    Ive forged a few bits of damascus over the last couple of months, but never quite got round to finishing a knife, Well, eventually managed it, its a baby one for a 'knife in the hat' . Took way longer to make than I thought it would. I forged the damacus from 15n20 & c20 , handle slabs from a reindeer antler. quite pleased with how it worked out, but looking forward to finsihing a proper sized one now : and with my next one to be finished...
  9. glad it found its way to you sam! BABA offer a magazine only subscription to overseas members ! Welcome to the British Artist Blacksmiths Association
  10. I do alot of work on 'eccentric shaft' forging presses, and in a nutshell its got absolutley no chance of making a useable open die (free forging) press. They are good for closed die work but the forces involved are massive. The medical bills youll cop from building a machine like youve sketched will make the $A 1000 ish for the flypress seem very reasonable indeed. really, dont even try it. (I do know what im on about, and can give numerous reasons why not to do this, but it would take about an hour, trust me on this one.)
  11. matt87, the story of my little gas forge is prettywell documented here... not so hot gas forge - British Blades :: Custom Knife Making ive welded a fair bit of 'mascus in it, and it heated the 7lb sledge head up to near what I would call a welding temp (on a pretty mingy gas input) in 10 mins. If nothing else the thread shows the differnce between an efficent burner and a nearly good enough one. (ive had the metal nearly melting when its been lit for an hour or so at moderate pressure through a 0.040"tip )
  12. I give ALL the surfaces to be welded a quick wizz on the linisher so youve got really clean metal. It takes 15 mins or less for a billets worth, but compared to spending the next 4 hours welding and folding only to find a defect its time well spent. Ive had reasonable success with bandsaw blades and pallet strap. If you can find the 1" wide pallet strap its alledgedly better (higher carbon) steel.
  13. the big one done in one heat, but I have kinda an abundance of forging kit (hammers and presses) knocking about - I squished it on a 12 ish ton hydraulic press You might need a mate with a sledge to do a ball pein one quickly, but shouldnt take to many heats - would probably be more fun than using power tools !
  14. I recently posted these pics on another forum, but they are quite relavent to this thread so Ill put them here aswell.... Ive found a couple of manky old hammers, so re-squished them into blacksmiths hammers, - The little ballpein (2 lbs) is now a diagonal pein, the 7 lb sledge is now a straight pein drawing hammer (though it will only be used for the odd few mins, it would disable me otherwise!) The sledge took about 10 mins to get warm in my little 1 burner venturi home made gasser! No tongs big enough so welded them to bits of bar! , I was just playing really as a distraction from proper work. They need H.T yet, but today I was in the local engineering supply place, and they gave me 2 suitable hickory handles free ) (though the cost of the stuff I bought for work was eyewatering!)
  15. nonjic

    Fly Press Again

    Heres the snap of the thread on the small press, hope it helps some...
  16. nonjic

    Fly Press Again

    Checked my little sweeny & blocksage, and the ram travel is approx 2" per full rev of the screw - (well, I measured approx 1/4", over 1/4 turn, and you rarely use more than a big quarter turn, as you end up in knots !) - I got some pics of the screw on my phone, Ill post em soon.
  17. I dont think a fabricated frame would stand the force of the screw (unless massivly constructed), your heading for a world of frustration & cost trying to make one. You may as well make a hydraulic press, or a treadle hammer, or a simple mechanical / pneumatic power hammer.
  18. nonjic

    Fly Press Again

    brian - I only use one for puching heavy gaskets now, but from memory about 1/4 turn ( a gentle swing on it) gives maybee 1/4 ram travel - someone smarter than me could give you the maths im sure thinking on that would make it a 1" pitch thread. This is on a little 'Sweeny & Blocksage'
  19. nonjic

    Fly Press

    that ebay 'screwpress' looks like a flypress suitable for general forge work to me. A screw press is really nothing like a hydraulic press for general forge work, its a mere fraction of the power of a small hydraulic press, to draw out on a flypress you have to 'bump' it, which is really hammering the steel, using the recoil to raise the ram again, thus saving a bit of energy. - remember you cant get 'free' energy - a flypress can only ever be 1 person powered, a small hydraulic press will be 2 horse power. On hydraulic presses from log splitters, this can be done (im sure ive seen it on the web somewhere) just make sure your hydraulic fluid is not flamable ! (think 5000psi flamethrower)
  20. nonjic

    Fly Press

    these things are so cheap used you would have to be mad to try and make one. In the UK you can score one for
  21. Ive only heard good things about John L's Iron Kiss hammers - He seems to really care about his product being the best he can possibly offer for the $ The chinese hammers (anyang and striker) have a much smaller footprint (and are more compact & rigid) than the turkish fabricated frame hammers, a 40 kg (88lb) will out hit, and be at least as controlable as a 110lb sahindler (I think the say mak is a very similar design, if not the same as a Sahindler, basically 'kuhn' clones). With the Anyangs & strikers (minature beche clones you can mount the motor underneath the hammer - motor pully facing out the back if you use a heavy (20mm + fabricated 'box' base) - you can get the footprint of an 88lber down to about 40" x 20" ! Peih tool sell them your side of the pond. (I sell the anyangs in the UK, but I am pretty impartial, and the numbers of units sold, and numbers of happy customers ive got speak for themselves) I know quite a bit about hammers of all sizes, And I think the chinese ones are good, and good value. hope this helps a little.
  22. Valentin, your hammer does look like a copy of a beche. it might be a 'stanko'? The size of the hammer looks like it could be 80 kg ram weight. This does not correspond with your motor though. The capacity of the motor is enough for a 150 kg ram weight hammer! (approx 20 h.p) The next time you do some maintenance you could take the ram out and weigh it!
  23. kallesme -good video, I like the bolt header. What make is it? what tonnage - about 100?
  24. wow, it looks like its been beaten more violently than a ginger stepson but it looks kinda nice in its own way. thanks for sharing it. When I make somthing that is a bit ' rough ' round the edges I use descriptive phrases like ' rustic ' , 'textured' etc..... gives it some b.s credability in my own mind anyways... look forward to seeing more in the future..
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