Jump to content
I Forge Iron

aessinus

Members
  • Posts

    255
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by aessinus

  1. My 25+ year old 110 lb Buffalo from Taiwan actually has a 7" rebound from 10" directly over the waist.  At the heel between 5-6". 

    Since it was a freebie,  I have used it as necessary over the years; working 3/4 sucker rod I can tell a difference from the shop anvil at work. 

    Hence, my year long search for a real anvil.  In the meantime, I've switched to using a 4x4x24" of 4140QT on end for anything over 3/8 mild steel.  The difference is significant.  

  2. Well, while we're on the topic... What CAN I use leaf spring for? Is it only relegated to use as knives?

    I suppose a spring fuller can be made from 1/2" coil spring without too much difficulty, right?

    I used a 4" chunk of ~1/2" thick truck spring to make the upright blade for a hot cut like in Brian B's video.  Tubing for the shank & a welded collar, since I was hesitant about my ASO.  Works sweet as fabricated.  Holding the edge much better than the old hardy I had.

  3. I found two 22" sticks of 1" x 5 tpi acme in the maintenance shop scrap pile.  Each one had a nut.  Appear to be drop from some "special" machine project.  Even with the tighter thread, ( checked my leg vises and all 4 are 4tpi) these are just begging to be used.  I'm not sure how best to turn the hex nuts into proper screw boxes.  If I used them for a woodworkers bench leg vise, I would just inlay into the fixed jaw. 

    I'm thinking salvaged ball hitches would make proper ends to fit the screws to.  Then there's the grease cup for the back...

  4. Hey yall,

     

    A friend of mine came over to the shop today to help me move some equipment in my shop, and when we were done, my fiend was looking at some of the hammer heads that Dave and I had forged, and he came up with a handle design. He drew a pattern on a piece of cardboard, and he made a very nice handle, at least I think so.

     

    SANY0441_zps038dfb7d.jpg

     

    I'm not sure how well it would work in a rounding hammer, but i know it would make a awesome hatchet or claw hammer handle. What do yall think?

     

    I think it looks good.  I've been making mine asymmetrical so my hand "know" which side is down.  Same for any double-bitted tool head. 

     

    By the by fellers, mine showed up last week & a forced myself to use it over the weekend.  That dude moves metal great.  It now has a place of honor at my living room station. Thanks very much!

  5. It's about to break the $870 mark... And it's got 1 day and 22 hours...

     

     

    Hope someone likes Crow...

    Too.Funny.

    Yeah, I put it on my watch list for the humor value.  At near $7/lb. Tex is gonna make his modification labor back, as well.  :lol:

    At this rate he might be able to sell his plans to farriers. 

  6. I've been following this thread all along & must say, bravo for getting your hands dirty & being stubborn.  Thankfully you have an onsite maintenance group willing to kick your butt in the right directions & offer brotherly aide.  The skills you have already learned... 

    Makes me curious as to your background to launch off into a project of this magnitude, since you continuously denounce prior fabrication knowledge.  You have obviously done due diligence regarding materials, processing, techniques.  Your project is coming along nicely & I expect to see great things from this anvil.  Color me impressed.

  7. Aessinus,

     

    Thanks, and I am pleased to be here amongst y'all too.

     

    Regards,

    Albert

     

    PS: For those of you that aren't from the South, "Y'all" means "all of you."

    Southernese, it's not just a language, it's an attitude.

    I keep forgetting this forum is worldwide, so thanks for the clarification, Albert.  fyi, "y'alls" is plural, "y'all's" is plural possesive - for when I slip up.

  8. First, thank you for your service. 

    Second, howdy & welcome from another newcomer. 

    Third, you seem to be at about the same point with your lad as I am with mine.

    I started off on small projects until some interest was evident, but now that he's finally asked, maybe he will take a genuine interest.  It would be nice to have a striker his size.  He's got me by near a hundredweight, because I'm a wormy little Texan. 

     

    Best of luck & xxxxxx glad to have you here, Sir!

  9. Assuming nothing has changed since the early 80's, sucker rod, drill stem, upset tubing are 4140 QT (quenched & tempered).  Working with 20-40 foot joints in the air would bend lesser stuff.  Around here they are fairly easy to come by from the pipe yard scrap pile in smaller bits. 

     

    If you weld it & can lay hold of 7018 rod, clean/prep your joint really nice & you can forge the welds when your done, if needed. 

×
×
  • Create New...