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I Forge Iron

Ratel10mm

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Posts posted by Ratel10mm

  1. Hammers of most sizes are available at Bunnings, Total Tools, Masters, Trade Tools Direct, Blackwoods, garage sales & car boot sales.
    Or, as has been said, make your own. Not too hard to do if you have either a striker, fly press or power hammer available.
    Something in the 1 - 1.5Kg range is probably best to start with.
    Then, technique plays a large part in avoiding damage to your body. Do your research here & on other sites. Find a time served smith to learn from as well. It's dead easy to stuff up your body in this trade - care & attention is required.

  2. Kicked a metal pole yesterday while chasing my toddler. Spent a large chunk of today at the doctor's & radiologists. It turns out that I broke the metatarsal(?) in ine of my toes, so I'm off work for a couple of days. There's some positives there - more Dad time. I might get to do something about the chaos in my ute tool boxes. Maybe tidy the driveway.

  3. ITC is commonly used in gas forges in the UK. If you search for it on the British Blades forum, I think you'll probably find references to suppliers as I know it's come up on threads there often enough.

  4. Dave, right now my anvil is a handy flat place to store my tool box. ;)

    My first anvil was a short piece of rail track that I nailed down to a log about 8" round. That rests on the ground, supported by a handy rock wall.
    As I understand it, the normal way of using rail track is to stand it upright as a post anvil, but this piece was neither long enough nor large enough in cross section for that. Anyway, it works quite well for small items.

  5. Go centrifugal over axial. Axials are the ones that look like a propeller, and they can't  overcome much resistance.

    I use a ventilation fan from a car, powered by a small battery charger (with an old battery as ballast). If you have a decent battery charger you probably won't need the battery.

    A bathroom exhaust sounds like it'd be a winner. One of my company's suppliers does a small-ish one with a 60mm outlet for about $80. If I hadn't already had the car fan set-up< I'd have gone with that.

  6. Andy, since uou're in the UK, get onto the British Blades forum. There's plenty of info on grinders there.
    And skateboard wheels have been proven to work well, see Ali's grinders.
    But for Prte's sake, get a qualified industrial sparky to give your grinder a once over before you start it, if nothing else. It's be a crying shame to electrocute or injure yourself through lack of knowledge. And fit an emergency stop, too!

  7. Jeremy, agreed that they must have been made specifically - at least in part.

    It's quite possibly an optical illusion, but the scrolls behind the competitor's head in photo 11 look traditionally done, not electrically welded? There's a hint of a rivet there, for e.g? Admittedly I'm looking at this on my phone, not my PC.

    Drewy, would you mind asking Guido when you're at the forge-in?

  8. I recently scored a couple of pairs of fork lift times for free, plus some odd bits & pieces of 'scrap' out of a client's scrap skip. :) A lot of their machinery is seriously heavy duty stuff. I've moved jobs since then, but that skip was quite a large item in the plus coloumn when deciding wether or not to move jobs! ;)

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