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I Forge Iron

JME1149

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Posts posted by JME1149

  1. Welcome to the club. Update your profile to include a location, you might be surprised how many smiths are close by.

    As for the anvil, the close-up picture of the side appears to show something, might be an Arm & Hammer?? Don't put too much faith in how loudly it rings, some of the best anvils barely make any sound at all, while other great anvils will cause hearing loss from their ring. It all depends on how they were created. A better test is the rebound of the top surface. Drop a large ball bearing from a fixed height and measure how high it bounces back, higher is better.

    Don't grind the top, flap wheel is OK to clean it up somewhat, but the best way is to start using it.

    Pull up a comfy chair, grab a drink and snack, and start reading through the many thousands of threads here, you will probably have most of your questions answered before you can think to ask them.

  2. I would think form the ends, then form the arch, then slit/drift the holes, then rivet the mounts. I would think trying to bend the arch after the holes were punched would just be asking for trouble with collapsing the holes or kinking them. However you did it, I like the way it turned out.

  3. Another option I actually prefer is to trace around the outline of the anvil base, get a router and cut a pocket 1/4" deep or so the exact shape of the anvil. This keeps the anvil from moving around while still being easy to remove for transport. Route a little deeper if you want to put a bed of silicone under it. A piece of flat bar with a couple lag bolts should hold well enough if you really want to secure it.

    I also second the chain wrap for damping down the ring.

  4. I always like it when people take the time and effort to make their tools attractive as well as functional, and you certainly have done so here. Only one question, why didn't you finish it? Looks like you forgot the little nib for the bottle opener.

  5. I like the concept of these. I can't quite make out from the photos but am assuming the spiral wrap piece is separate from the base and welded to it. If so, you might want to move the handle part to the bottom of the candle. As for the feet, maybe a small spiral instead of just the right angle bend. Very nice prototypes.

  6. Rather than grind the top surface to restore big corner radii, you could just make up a block with a stem that fits the hardie. Grind a different radius on each of the four sides of the block and you have more options than just re-doing the anvil. If you insist on grinding the anvil, why not dress the sides rather than the top? You'll make the face a bit narrower, but not noticeably so.

    If you absolutely insist on grinding the face, make sure your buddy flips her upside down first and dresses the base (feet) to make them parallel to the existing face, the flip it back upright and kiss the face. This will remove the least amount of stock from the hardened face, but could still be enough to ruin the anvil.

    Ultimately, it's your equipment and you can do whatever you want to it, we all just hate to see a century old piece of history get destroyed for future generations.

  7. Broaching is a cutting method where a shaped bit, square in this case, is pushed through a hole creating the shape. Think like a punch but it shaves the metal off. Usually has many steps of slightly increasing size per step, each step taking off just a bit more metal.

    EDM is electrical discharge machining, could be plunge type where a square electrode is pushed thru the block, electrically burning away the shape, or wire edm where a small diameter wire is charged and travels thru the part cutting out the shape in it's path.

  8. This is my second rose. I wanted to try something a little different than cutting the petals out of sheet copper and wondered how small I could go and still get a decent result. I started out with four pennies, flattened, traced a scaled down pattern and went to work. I think there are things I could have done a little better, but overall am pleased with the results. You can't much cheaper than four cents and a piece of ground wire. Hope you enjoy.

    4pennyrose.JPG

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