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I Forge Iron

Jon Smith

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Posts posted by Jon Smith

  1. Well yes that would be the obvious answer. The less obvious one would be that the parent wood was reclaimed, which would give the piece a lot of character and make it more of a conversation piece.

  2. Baton Rouge? Hoss I'm just a couple hours down the road, that's any saturday you say? I'll have to take you up on that in the future :D. A friend of mine from Eunice and her dad have recently gotten into Blacksmithing, and they started with spike knives as first projects. I did mine yesterday for giggles and it turned out better than I thought.


    Whoa whoa whoa lets put the brakes on this wagon train for a second. Who's the new smiths in Eunice? I wasn't aware there were any metal bashers in town
  3. I would be more inclined to make a set of swages rather than try to involve gears, drums and framework for a rolling mill, maybe even a set of faux rebar dies for a guillotine :)


    I was thinking swages too, or make a knife out of normal rebar and just weld in a bit and make it San Mai
  4. Now I know I have engineering on the brain--I saw "integrals" and immediately started thinking of calculus....

    Needless to say, I definitely like these integrals better. Wouldn't mind having one for a hunting knife

  5. Do a search on here for the original etcher post, as its not my idea, but here's how it works.
    Take an old laptop charger and cut off the end that goes to the computer.
    Strip back the wires then separate the positive and negative. On mine, the negative was wrapped around the positive.
    Attach the positive wire (I attached alligator clips) to the blade and the negative to a cotton ball or q-tip dipped in salt water.
    To form the design, I coat the area I want to etch in nail polish then scratch the image into the dried polish with an xacto knife.
    Then, plug in the charger and apply the salty cotton to the design. It should start to fix and produce an acrid smell. About 30 seconds should do it.
    Reversing the wires will produce a darker mark.
    Then remove the polish and shine normally

  6. Might still be a bit much...but if it looks like it'll hold the edge then you should be good.
    I normally go with a deep yellow/ light brown temper for an hour in the oven for 5160.

    Either way, welcome to the addiction that is bladesmithing

  7. Many knifegrade alloys will crack or even shatter in water. So if you don't know the "proper" heat treat you usually start with trying a quench in warmed oil and going to a faster or slower quench from that depending on the results. If you do know the proper heattreat *use* *it*!


    5160 spring steel cracks badly in a water quench....trust me on that one. Lost a few good blades that way
  8. You're smoking tobacco...it's unhealthy to begin with. But then again, working a forge all day, especially a coal one, is bad for you too. Pick your poison I suppose.

    So long as there's no heavy metals involved to burn off, it should be relatively safe. Though I have heard that a metal pipe doesn't smoke the same as, say, a good briar. Not being a smoker, I couldn't say for certain.

  9. Again, I may be wrong as I've never seen/worked with one in person, but a vertical forge would be set up similar to a normal gas forge (anyone ever try coal?) except that the chamber is oriented vertical with burners through the side. I would assume the reason being that long pieces of hot iron tend to bend under their own weight as you remove them from the fire in the normal horizontal orientation?

  10. I'm sure he will correct me if I'm wrong, Ne0spartan, but I don't think Thomas is referring to a vertical forge (though they do exist). I think he means a temp-controlled heat treating kiln or furnace with a vertical chamber to prevent sag (warp).

  11. No there's no problem with it, and I have read through the ref materials. I was just wondering if anyone had come up with other methods/ materials that weren't listed. The whole vacuum/pressure thing kind of throws me for a true, deep stabilization.

  12. I went ahead with the bag method and have it in a compressed two gallon ziplock in a dark corner of the shop. With it finally turning colder (below 75*) down south, it shouldn't get too hot.

    Which leads to the next step. Anyone have a good home process to stabilize this bad boy? I keep seeing the minwax wood hardener, but anything else that has good results?

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