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I Forge Iron

saintjohnbarleycorn

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Posts posted by saintjohnbarleycorn

  1. Well I made one and it doesn't sound so good. I made it about 20" on the three sides. I am thinking that the length will also affect the sound. A certain length will probably resonate more with 1/2" square. Like 18" will will resonate more than 20" or visa versa. What are the dimensions of the one that were made with 1/2" square? thanks.

  2. Thanks, as usual a lot to learn about things. I would guess that the crystal structure of the steel would have something to do with it. There is also "Bell brass" they use in banjo's so there must be different types of brass. I may do some experimenting on this one, but as time is an issue here, (birthday present) I have some 1/2" square that I will use. The diameter of the hay rake is 3/8" or less. Don't have a lot of spring material, but I am curious about this. thanks again.

  3. If I know what you are talking about, there is no gasket, the oil stays on the bottom and is carried up with the gears as you turn it. Mine seeps a little here and there I think the last time that I put oil in it I used 30 weight or 90 weight I can't remember and it didnt' seem to make much difference. That was a good find you got. good luck.

  4. Thanks for the input, I have a bucket of vermiculite but have not put it to much use yet. The warmed sand sounds good also. The high carbon spikes I think were said to be .30 so that is not that much anyway I would not think. I was confused, because of the .95 hay rake teeth. The things I saw on them never mentions a double annealing.

  5. I read the bp on it, anneal twice, bring to heat and leave in forge overnight. Well that the way I remember it anyway. I was wondering why they need more special attention than say 95 point straight carbon steel?

    2. I was also thinkning that at 19 degrees out the forge kind of cools pretty quickly overnight, and might it be better to put it in the woodstovefireplace over night as it would cool very slowly over a 8 or ten hour period.

    thanks.

  6. What type of lathe can you get for under $1,000. I have never used one, except a wood lathe. I would like to use if for turning small parts, doing threads, and for sizing shafts for making other tools and the like. I don't really have a good idea of what size you need for what job. I don't know of any used places around here, maybe in philly, and I would like one that doesn't need a lot of work that I don't know how to do to fix it. It would be an adjunct to the metal working I am doing now. thanks for any input.

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