Jump to content
I Forge Iron

Dave51B

Members
  • Posts

    717
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by Dave51B

  1.  Nope no fee....just show up. Maybe bring something for iron in the hat, and a few bucks to buy tickets for the drawing.  That was maybe Bill Newman? I don't know for sure. I have only been there once, and it was all good.....Got a coil spring off a train or something, I'm still making tools from that thing....awesome. If ya go, report back on how it went. Gotta move my son into his new house that day.....Don't be scared....they won't bite...lol                 Life is Good               Dave

  2.  Berkley, if you happen to check back in here. The satellite 13 group is meeting @ the state fair grounds blacksmith shop this Saturday. Take the anvil with you and you can get input on it, first hand. If your just looking to sell it, you might run into a buyer.. Life is Good        Dave 

  3. 6 hours ago, Kozzy said:

    it was about $ .50 USD each

     Thanks a bunch for that. Like I said, I have been asking for years...Even the old smiths at Quad-State didn't give me a solid figure...speculation, but not firm. Maybe I didn't ask right, who knows...(What was that Carlson guys name?) . Now you got me thinking I need to check in with some of the old shops to see if they have any records from years back.....

    I guess what got me Thinking about all this is....next month we have a meeting @ my favorite shop. It's a line shaft shop with an ideal plow sharpener in working order. I gotta round up some more shears.....        Life is Good                 Dave   

  4. 1 hour ago, ThomasPowers said:

    Have you asked around at any of the old folks/assisted living/nursing homes

     Oh, I have been asking for years..My Dad soon to be 94 and a life long farmer, all his old buddies,multiple tractor club members, anyone at antique tractor shows, etc.....Shoot, I can't even get a solid answer to how much the b/s charged to sharpen. Let alone repoint. I was raised on the farm and have plowed thousands of acres. However none with B/S shears, until recently when I started collecting plows...I do have a few..

     

    44 minutes ago, Kozzy said:

    any 10 farmers will give you 15 answers

     Oh you got that right ! 

     What I did today after thinking on it overnight, was to take a NOS plow shear and hold it on the anvil and forge a piece of flat leaf spring on it to the face of the shear. Welded that to a piece of angle iron to clamp in the post vice for a mandrel to put the proper radius back into a drawn out shear. The point of the shear is where the "suck" comes into play on soil types in my opinion...(1 of 15).....I do have some "haw" replacement points for you walkin' guys. I just plow "gee" anymore.         Thanks for the feedback             Life is Good            Dave

  5.  I have abit of experience sharpening plow shears. The question I have is, does anyone know the proper radius of a blacksmith shear to create the proper "suck" to get the shear to go into the ground properly?  It sure would be easier if I had a mandrel to finish the face curvature instead of eyeballing it.  I can go into more detail if needed, but an old time smith out there surely knows off the top of his head.        Thanks in advance                Dave          

  6.  A few years back when starting out, I put my mark on the back of my work. As things improved I started marking the front. Now it seems I look to place it more front and center. The problem I am now finding is, it seems I need  to order a smaller one for the work I am doing. I need to check with the guy out in Idaho if he can make me another one in 1/16 inch. The 1/8 inch is just to big at times.        Life is Good                Dave 

  7.  They look like worn spike tooth harrow ( ground leveling farm equipment ) tines to me. But, most I've been around are just straight. The wear on the bottom is indicative of being drug over the ground though.         Life is Good               Dave

×
×
  • Create New...