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I Forge Iron

Brian C.

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Posts posted by Brian C.

  1. I dealt with several burns when I was an EMT. Picked up a toddler one sunday afternoon who had pulled a crock pot off of the counter, it shattered and scalded the top of one foot. I think the worst was an 18 yr. old boy who worked at a fast food joint. While cleaning up, he slipped and went arm first into a deep fryer, way up the arm & when he recoiled away he swept the grease out all-over his front. Luckily it had been turned off for about 15 min. or so & did no permanent damage.

    And, I too have picked up black parts that werent quite as cool as I thought. Here at the plant they call that "inattention to detail".

  2. Rome, Thanks for your posting. I was a member for one year and did not renew, being strictly a hobbiest I did not see any benefit to me. I would respectfully suggest that the group study SOFA's Quad State operation for ideas and pricing for a "convention". Also, the local groups newsletters seem to be more beneficial, "how to's" etc. than the ABANA periodicals. JMHO.

  3. I brazed a good bit of galvanized conduit doing custom work in Dad's orthopaedic shop as a young man. Always noticed the aforementioned "sweet smell" & a little lightheadedness then always compounded it by smoking an unfiltered cigarette right afterwards. Double dumb on my part. :( But, at the time we werent aware of the galvanize hazard, and I was too hard headed about the smoking thing.

  4. I only wear a glove on my tong hand when I have a very short work piece and the gasser cranked up producing a lot of the dragons breath-rarely. I agree with Hollis, never on my hammer hand for the same reason. Don't ask how I learned this the hard way. :) Getting a hot glove off is almost as much fun as trying to get a shoe off that caught a hot piece-no low quarter shoes either.

  5. Kevin- Don't bother with the little bitty torch sets (trust me on this) you spend more time trading out tanks than you do working. The only good feature is that they ARE portable. I sold mine and got the mid-size set, where the tanks are waist high or so. Much better, but even at that the welding supply house says not to run a rosebud torch on them due to size limitations.

    Most importantly, find someplace who can instruct you on the proper and SAFE usage of them. Oxy-acet. is nothing to be careless with. I keep my tanks chained to the cart and the cart chained to the wall. Kinda like wearing a belt and suspenders. :)

  6. Bob- it should look familiar, I emailed you for directions on how you made the rack on yours at the time. :) That 3 burner is now on stand-by duty while I use the new mid-size single burner from Chile Forge, it is a dandy.

  7. For a BIG buffer, you should have seen the one in Dad's orthopaedic shop. We used a 5 hp motor with a 1.5 in. shaft turning an 18 or 20 in. wheel. It would really cut the scratches out, but it was as dangerous as a cocked gun if you were'nt on your toes at all times (don't ask me how I know). I could have had it when he retired, but it was 3 phase & here I am in a suburb more or less with only regular service. :(

  8. Pault17- I never really checked to be exact. When I had the NC whisper daddy it seemed to do quite well. The last 3 burner I had (in the photo) was a real gas hog, even just running 2 burners. At Quad State I bought a new single burner, mid-sized, forge from the nice folks at Chile Forge. I havent got to use it but once yet so I cant say, it can run on a much lower pressure so I expect it to be quite a bit better on fuel.

    I realize that was a long post & still didnt really answer the question, just my experience.

  9. I set the gasser on top of some firebrick on the top of a Sears utility cart. The tongs go on the handles at each end and the hammers go into a rack I made across the front. Heavy but functional and portable.

    3523.attach

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