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I Forge Iron

JimsShip

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Posts posted by JimsShip

  1. I also found this comment, and was wondering about your thoughts on it-

     

    "If you quench them in water they can have stress cracks in them.  Quenching them in oil means they will have a duller red spark but this spark last much longer and catches in the char cloth better thus igniting it with the first strike. First the striking surface is white (no fire scale) showing that it was at " Critical Temperature" when it was quenched in the oil.  (The fire scale popped off) Then the handle was tempered to a deep blue so it won't be as brittle."

     

    Is this the best way to quench a striker?

    How do you temper the handle to a deep blue?

  2. Thanks! I'll drop him a note.

    I'm glad it would work out, I couldn't find a welder to cut a propane tank, and Frosty gave me the idea to use chimney pipe, but when looking for some, the stuff i found was way pricey, so this may make a nice option.
     

  3. Yeah the math is a bit beyond me as well.

    I read some of the stickies on treatments and when they start talking molecular structures or grades os steel my mind starts to drift...

    I work basically with scrap I scavenge, and spark testing only works if you know what your looking at (THAT would be an extremely helpful video if anyone has time!)
     

    I just asked because I wasn't sure if I made a bottle opener say, out of a horseshoe, if I should be treating it to strengthen the tab or something.

     

  4. This probably should be asked in another section, but since the subject has been brought up i'll ask it here.

    I mostly make small items (candle holders, keyrings and such) and after brushing or filing, i'd heat them a bit to allow the beeswax to coat nicely and then let them set to cool on their own.

    Should I be tempering or hardening or something else? I haven't made a blade yet (on the long list!) which I know will need to be treated, but for general stuff like this is there a another step I should be taking?

  5. AWESOME!

    I was wondering what you used to form the loop, I thought you'd have a special mandrel or something, but it's just the anvil horn. Nicely demonstrated.

    You use the wooden mallet for finishing, or is that to get the beveled edge on the loop?

    (I don't use a wooden mallet, i think i'm missing something important!)

     

    Also- I love the music, I could just listen to that all day.

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