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I Forge Iron

aessinus

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Posts posted by aessinus

  1. 1 hour ago, gote said:

    This will be a fantastic vise. Both jaws heavy and transferring the load down to the base plate. I like that. It will be a dream for upsetting.

    Moving the hinge to the ground was Kevin Olson's suggestion.  Since they were full forks, I figured "Why not"?   It will look like a hand-vise for the Jolly Green Giant, but it ought to be sturdy.

    After checking load ratings for Thomson ball-screw shafting vs acme, I ordered 1-1/2" acme & three nuts.  At <$90 from Mcmaster, I'm fairly pleased to have that be the only purchase so far, and that's enough shafting to do two more vises, maybe. 

    On the scrounge for something both hold two nuts, in time, to prevent them locking.  I have a 4" ball hitch, but it's justs looks too big.  Hunting a 3" & several buddies looking too.   Still need something fairly heavy wall for the hinge barrel & settle on an initial mount design....

    If only work would stop interfering with my play time. 

     

  2. 10 hours ago, JHCC said:

    Okay, this isn't smithing-related, but I think you'll all like this. Yesterday, a band of thunderstorms ripped through Ohio, and my town got hit by wicked downbursts. No one hurt that I know of, but trees down all over the place. One of the hickories at the golf course split apart and revealed itself to be:

    A bee tree!

    The sheer plethora of interests here astounding.  JHCC, did you hive the colony?

  3. I didn't think to snag a pic, but picked up a 15" adjustable wrench for $2 at the pawn shop.  Between roof tar & rust, the only thing legible was MM by the head.  I've been needing a twisting wrench to keep in the tong rack, so a cheap import should do, no?   Vinegar soaked overnight to loosen the rust & some acetone to take off the tar.

    Once the screw was moving the jaw, I started brushing.  Lo & behold, beneath a layer of black paint was a Rigid with only the plating rubbed off the high spots.  Must have been in water with some bare iron, because there is barely any pitting.  Pretty sweet deal

  4. Very consistent style; I really like the elegant turned eyes.

    On 9/9/2016 at 6:13 AM, jlpservicesinc said:

    Not to bad forging wise..    maybe 30minutes of forge time.. 2 minutes with the file and another few with the wire brush..

    Timed exam today.  I hope I'm up to it.  Just curious, what weight is your hammer?

  5. I noticed your mention of charcoal 1st thing.  I make my own from scrap pallets (free).  

    My firepot is about 4" with some firebrick hunks to help mound it up in my ancient rivet forge.  Cut way back on your air or use a dump gate; the fleas will let you know when it's enough.  Does not go out when the forced air stops.   Works a treat on small stock (<3/4") because of the minimal scaling and doesn't seem to decarb nearly like coal.

  6. Slag, thank for the reference.

    7 hours ago, SmoothBore said:

    Stuff a possum with apples, ... or "dirty" rice.

    You bake a possum, wrapped in foil.

    ( By that, I mean you wrap the possum in foil, ... it doesn't matter how you're wrapped, ... tightly, or otherwise. )

    Ah, but does the tinfoil impart a metallic flavor?

  7. On 9/6/2016 at 6:35 PM, HEAP of JEEP said:

    I did buy some small lag screws, removed the zinc, and squared the heads to use for it, but no matter what I tried, they kept coming out crooked and I could figure out a way to get them straight.  I only played around with a half dozen or so before i got frustrated and gave up, but I agree, they would have made it look a lot better.

    Trying to square up tiny screws can be tough.  Twenty years ago I had access to an old hardware by work.  You had to blow the dust from the bins just to see what was in there.  Lots of NOS fasteners.  Unfortunately the owner passed away & the kids didn't want it.

    Prior to the DG's dresser, look at blacksmithbolt.  They even have some old time brass hardware to set off a black oiled finish.

  8. On 9/9/2016 at 11:11 AM, ThomasPowers said:

    Only take off as much of that face as you are willing to take off your own face and do your own first!

    Glenn, this quote needs an anvil stickie!

    its not in the anvil section, so he would not have seen it anyway.  With so much being asked, this most likely wont be, Pray he learns to read before he post too much moire. I am splitting the rest of this into the forge section,

  9. 11 hours ago, Dunk_c said:

    Here it is finished, with my first 1045 hammer blank on top.  Should save the face of the small anvil.

    I keep hunting sledge blocks to save my smallish anvils too.  Big ones seem hard to come by & my two small ones have already seen hard use.  Now to locate some thing similar myself.  I really like the idea of integral legs.  I have some T22 (I think) boiler tube 3"OD with 3/8"wall that would make sturdy legs......

  10. @ausfire  -  My toolmaker bells went off!  I'm not artistic, at all, but the texture wants to be touched every day...  Eyeball scaling agin the thumb of the glove it looks to be 18 - 25mm?  Looks so much like driftwood, absolutely gorgeous.  You should forget more often.

    How would it work for handle scales on a big "Perfect Handle" twisting wrench?  Too heavy for cutter scales; a heavy slow use tool though might work.  You would have to saw split it, which stabs me in the heart a wee bit....  

  11. 3 hours ago, Ridgewayforge said:

    ....  cabinets full of drawers ....

    I have some heavy-duty commercial bread loaf pans, made in gangs of four, that should just about fit under wood pallets.  A stack of those could make a dandy "chest-o-drawers".  Thanks for the inspiration!

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