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I Forge Iron

RainsFire

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Posts posted by RainsFire

  1. plus, if your hammer work is good, you can do different things than can stock removal, or folk who rough forge and do most of the forming by grinding. Hammer finished spines on blades would be a big one, you have to hammer it down to the final dimension, and still keep it looking good

    sorry for the repost

  2. hammer work is still insanely important, I've practiced it for 5 or so years, and can hammer a blade to final dimensions, while leaving it about as thick as a nickle, and only have to grind down the scale for the heat treatment proccess.

  3. Generally you want a post vice, because they transfer more of the force to the floor, instead of all being soaked by a machinist vice, where you can actually eventually break it :/ It'll will work for most things, and is a good investment, but a postvice is what has always been used for blacksmithing.

  4. Hi,

    so, as the graduation finale for our highschool, it is required of us to do something called a senior project, where in we take from beginning to end a task that is closely wound with our interests. I of course chose blacksmithing, and metal forming

    so, for my project, we needed to make something tangible, so My mentor and I have converted a stall in our pole barn to be an enclosed, (ventilated) blacksmith, and general metal shop. its about 12x 40ft and will have all my existing equipment in it. I'm not new to blacksmithing, though I certainly have a way's to go. but anyway.
    As part of the project, I need someone to interview, it can be an online interview, all I need is a printout of our conversation, and I would be seriously in debt to any of the Knowledgeable members of this forum if they wouldn't mind helping me out. The project is due next Wednesday :/

    What I would need advice on is the layout and placement of the elements to my shop. I have a 120lb Russian anvil, a 200lb metal table, a charcoal/coal forge, a propane forge, a post vice, and bins/racks for scrap material.

    so anyway, if anyone is interested in helping me out, I would really appreciate it.

    Thanks again,
    -Kenon Rain

  5. So, I want to start doing damascus type work, and my current gas forge can't get hot enough.

    I'm guessing that a blown burner will be my best bet, as I can control more and get the most heat, but I was wondering if using veggie oil would actually work? I've heard it has plenty of btu's, but is it clean enough for a good weld? will I want a vertical forge design? and what's the benifit of that?

    anyway, what I'm wondering is, what are the most important things in building a forge specifically for welding, if you have a design that works please describe it :)

    thanks everyone.

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