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I Forge Iron

aessinus

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Everything posted by aessinus

  1. Several places on amazon have quarts, but + shipping. The rutland gallon is prime eligible, free shipping for the same money ($30)
  2. That's true. What I meant is there are some I won't bother with again. Grackle, copperhead, water moccasin fall in that category; taste bad. even smoked. Armadillo, on the other hand, makes awesome fajitas. Raccoon is good, just a tad greasy, I've cooked bobcat a few times too. When we lived in Schuylkill county, PA, I cooked pigeon on a regular basis. Farm country has loads of them & no season.
  3. Nah, we don't smoke 'em, we just chute 'em! @ausfire had roo jerky a few times, but never steak. Texans will jerk pretty much any sort of critter to carry in their pocket, and I've been known to cook anything that wanders by, at least once.
  4. Using a 7/8" one for a vise hinge, with RR plate for the hinge cheeks...
  5. Nice rack! Planning to put in a school?
  6. BF, you always do such nice work, makes me want to try harder. Regarding stamping, get some 1/4"aluminum MIC6 scrap & practice. When your satisfied with the results, well.......
  7. Oh my goodness, best wall brace EVAR!
  8. @Fatfudd, I have both a HB and older NC farrier. both under 100# Next new purchase will probably be a dwarven short waist like the Nimba or Bulgar from Old world. i'll wait for the really big one until I have g-kids to strike for me....
  9. on purpose? Some folks have a thing for mice, others it's creepy crawlies like spiders, wasps, snakes. I've worked on a commercial farm; wild hogs give me nightmares. They don't leave nothing for the next of kin.....
  10. On top of a demoing summer, you have been busy. Quite the trailer shop. Your fab skills are to be commended. No I'm not suggesting you are a welder! I applaud your efforts & It looks like you have thought it out well (You will never change a thing, smiths never do). The anvil stand & vise mount are just awesome!
  11. Awesome work. All done at a demo? Don't get nervous around crowds apparently.. Kudos for that
  12. I was on Queen's Island once-st, maybe early 90's. Looks to me like it might have stood in a bit o the brine for a bit... The old Newtownabbey facility had a load of warehouses on the waterfront that were deteriorating. Very fascinating place and history.
  13. Congrats on the heirloom. Nice touches your grandfather made with the accent stones. Shows he had some artistic blood. The genes went through to your work lad. Grandpa would be proud of your work & ecstatic that you are using his forge to build beautiful things!
  14. Looks like loom shuttles, maaaaybe? Natural fiber weaving? or something a bit more exotic?
  15. I agree. Beautiful lines. I sometimes I have clientele that don't drive 1 ton welding trucks. Always good to have alternative styles. Actually something similar would make my son's grandmother pretty happy for x-mas.
  16. TPAAT in action! Congratulations! Keep the wife happy & interested; you might need a striker one day
  17. Outta work. That would be a way bigger hog than I needed to be against. Planning to project it somehow?!?
  18. When I posted this, I was expecting it would devolve to recipes. Thank you all. Now I'm hungry. So I'll throw this out. What do you each stuff your possums with? Brussel sprouts,including all the Brassica family or just traditional celery, onion, garlic and cornbread crumbles? Ausfire, do you all(spelled out so he don't have to figure out texan) eat your possums? How do you cook them down south?
  19. Smoggy, my lack of smell thing has been at least since I was 19 & worked in an oilfield repair machine shop. Carbon-arc gouging never bothered me with the odor, so that task always seemed to fall to me. My mother insisted I shower before even leaving work because I smelled like "that nasty place". btw, there was a hedgehog as a pet several years back. It didn't smell much, certainly not like a musky old possum or rats. Slag, you are perfectly clear in all your posts. You seldom throw me off with innuendo or sly jokes. There are other folks that post & I have to read several times or get son to interpret. Jokes tend to go over my head the 1st time though. I did read thru both references & discussed with the lad. His organic chemistry is fresher (30 years more current too) and he went much deeper as a pre-vet. He's as baffled as I that I don't get the odors. Who knows, I could have damaged something in my nose or the circuits along the way. Ausfire, brass is a no go. Ammonia in the polishes I smell, but nothing from mechanically grinding or polishing, Y'all's little possums don't smell much, but they wouldn't make much of a Sunday dinner like our big guys. gote, check Kozzy's reference articles about metal odor & the reactions. Very interesting.
  20. Hit the nail there lad. Yes, find fuel, get it hot and go to work!
  21. aessinus

    Three more

    Do you need a groundskeeper? I have a tent. Awesome!
  22. Sorry Boss. Try wire cut electrical discharge machining. Somewhat the same results as waterjet, just closer results. Is the shizzzbomb!... Once again, I find myself to be a mutant. Sigh.
  23. Very interesting research Kozzy. Thanks for posting. I'll have to do some more looking tonight. Apparently my skin does the right thing to metal because the boy, and his mom, can always tell if I been "hands on" all day. At work, we use primarily use bandsaws or similar, produces very fine dust that must be pungent. Our material is not touched without gloves during processing. Our customers insist their parts be clean & ready to bond, but the dusts go everywhere, even with big dust collection systems. The fish smell I do recall from AFS(American Foundry Society) college days. We had a very well equipped foundry for green sand, different core methods, a permanent mold machine, two big gas furnaces & two brand-new induction furnaces. I remember one of the cores smelled like sardines when you opened the molds. I don't recall which core type it was though. Good times, but just too many years ago. We had an 80# brass melt get away from the instructor/club mentor; when everybody bailed, I ran the length of the shop (100' feet?) to kill the furnace & get all the roof purge blowers going to evacuate the smoke. I held my breath mostly, but have been gunshy of zinc ever since. Made me pretty sick
  24. Nope, nor taste. My paying shop machines aluminum & composite honeycomb for aerospace mostly. If a cutter gets glowing hot (dull) I can smell the burning adhesive where the aluminum foil is bonded together easily, as in before other folks notice there is an issue. All the composites I can distinguish by the resin odor when they are machined. Son's work shop machines honeycomb in SS, Hastex, etc. It's all spot-welded together on site, but no smell for me. He says he tell what general type is running by the smell. The wire EDM's and spark erosion grinders apparently smell really strong, but all I get is the funky electrolyte and cutting oil fumes in the machine shop. Dunno, maybe I am am a throwback
  25. @RidgewayforgeJust tried my HB, only thing I get is the honey taste from the beeswax I keep on the face, TP, I must be a mutant. Never knew anyone could til the lad mentioned it a few years ago. Seriously, no smell, no taste, I get nothing... Even way back in college, I figured the guys complaining about canned beer tasting funny were just being snooty about my cheap stuff.. I should do some research I suppose. My sniffer works good in the woods; I can smell a possum & figure out which tree he went up.
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