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I Forge Iron

dablacksmith

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Posts posted by dablacksmith

  1. interesting challenge ... i dont think i could do it in one heat .i rarely work anything that big and when i do its with a power hammer ...
    ive seen some smiths where it wouldnt be a problem (Pieter Ross comes to mind) not sure it really has much to do with skill tho ..at least part of that is gota be force ...

  2. i have a copied data sheet from the company .. it is too poor to make a copy of . it isnt the same as what is on the websight now . it is from a batch of spikes purchaced by a friend from tuson . he had people say the same things so he brought a copy of the safety data sheet with him to show. i know that when it is forged it acts like a high cabon steel . also did the harden and break test it broke with defenite grain structure (it was defenitely HARD) now i dont think all rr spikes are high carbon ... but i do think there are some that for one reason or another are hardenable . just to prove my point i will forge one out to 3/16 or so harden it in water break it and take a picture .


  3. NO matter what you heard or read there are no high carbon RR spikes


    well i beg to differ... the company Gerdau Ameristeel makes rr spikes and lists them in theyre material data safety sheets as having bolth hi carbon and mid carbon and lists the high carbon as having .9 % carbon content . i have worked these spikes and they do harden i dont own a rockwell hardness tester so can not give numbers .These are new spikes and i am treating them as 1095 . not helpful in identifying used ones but if a person wants to buy new....
  4. if i remember right this was one of the earlier hammers built ...if all the parts are there and its not froze up ide get it! should work well and 90 lbr is a good heavy size... looks good but anything that is broken you will have to make as its a old hammer (1888 patent date!) . I personally like older machines they seem to be built to last! if your not into old machinery tho you might want to pass ....good luck!

  5. the other thing that bothers me is a post asking the same question that has been answered time and time again.. as far as accuracy in answers you gota look at what the person posting answers has posted and figure from there ...

  6. nice work! if you wanted the rush lamp a little taler you could get a couple of inches by changeing the curled section a little make the curl tighter at the top and closer (hard to decribe ) i think you did a good clean job ! i like that type of ironwork tho i dont get much call for it... too far out west ...

  7. ime of the opinion that a clean shop is the sign of a warped mind..... But i have had coustomers say my shop was clean or at least cleaner than they remember there dads being....i can generally find my tools and there are clean spots on the floor ... i even sweep it once every few months....

  8. generally the size of hammer isnt going to cause much problem.. before i went thru all the work i would try putting it on boards or maybee a hard rubber mat under it ... ive seen many hammers set up on slabs with little vibration problems but... where do you live ? that can be a problem also i remember a person that house was on a granite rock that connected the neiborhood ! you could use a jackhammer in his basement and feel it 5 houses away...good luck!

  9. you might be able to weld it together with oxy acyl ....depends on location and type of crack also you might be able to silver solder it...its kinda tricky to weld /braze...if its possable to silver solder that will probably be easyier to get a good result...good luck

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