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I Forge Iron

thingmaker3

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Posts posted by thingmaker3

  1. After getting some coffee and breakfast in me this morning, I went out to assess the situation. I'll need to un-crumple the forge hood. I'll need to replace one exhaust duct. The tent is ripped from thither to yon.

     

    The anvils, vice, and forge are covered. Anything currently exposed won't be hurt by snow or rain.

     

    I have a functional one-brick forge in the backseat of the car, as well as the pencil torch which powers it. I have a 12 pound sledge head I can dig out of the snow and  use as an anvil. I can still make things.

     

    Options for a replacement workplace include, but are not limited to:

     

    1) sewing up the 20' rip in the tent.

     

    2) buying another surplus GP small tent.

     

    3) building a wee pole barn to use as a smithy now & stoage or goat shed down the road.

     

    4) going into debt up to my eyeballs and building a 30' x 40' pole barn a couple years earlier than origionally planned.

     

    Option 3 is attractive to me today. An actual decision can await the melting of the snow this coming week

  2. One may save a great deal of gnashing of teeth by using proven designs while learning. If one truly wishes to walk prior to flying, there are several resources for proven small aluminium furnaces.

    Worry now about getting a good pour without risk of injury. Worry much later about manipulating 40 pounds of sear-your-bones liquid chasing you around the shop. :o

  3. You guys are confusing "grain" with "crystal structure" and "atoms." It is the alignment of the atoms which makes for magnetic or nonmagnetic. It is the crystal structure (how the atoms stack, whethere aligned or not) which makes for ferrite or austenite. It is whole crystal, whether magnetic ferrite or nonmagnetic austenite, which constitues a grain. What we do with or to the grain structure makes a differenence for mechanical properites, of course, but has no influence on magentic vs nonmagnetic.

     

    Other than carbides and inclusions, you won't find any "molecules" in steel - only a crystal matrix.

     

    I hope that was more help than hinderence.

  4. When I looked at the thread title, I had two thoughts. First: "I've never heard of 20 series steel." Second "it won't have enough carbon, will it?"

     

    Clearly I need more coffee...

     

    Dave, those are really nice hammers. The decorative cheeks look great.

  5. Nor would said engineer refuse to use individual equations describing how said materials react. There is no "bridge equation." Nor would said engineer have learned all those equations simultaneously. (Anybody here learn the whole suite of smithng skills at once?)

     

    On 2/7/2014 at 8:16 AM, Gerald Boggs said:

    No, it has no application.

    That nail over there is useless. So is this board. That whole pile of nails has no application. This whole stack of boards has no application. I wanted a shack, not a bunch of useless items!

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