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I Forge Iron

Xaiver

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Posts posted by Xaiver

  1. Lol 

    Makes sense. Yeah, they're for bird feeders andplants and whatever else you want to hang in the middle of nowhere. 

    Would steel make a good sheep catcher? The wife andI have been talking about getting some sleep, so this could be helpful to know for other purposes. 

  2. Sorry, I've been away for a while. 

    No, I'm not using a template. I just got a little mig welder,I was debating welding a thinner rod to the leg to help stabilize it though. 

    I haven't been in the forge all winter, so who knows, maybe they will look completely different whenI get it started up again. 

  3. Still working on getting this right, but iI feel that these two are much better then the first ones iI made.... Partially because iI made a bending jig. 

    They're not quite identical, iI let one cool a bit before finishing the big bend.... And it didn't fit into my forge anymore. 

    20151028_200602.jpg

    20151028_200609.jpg

  4. My shop is basically the garage. It's a detached garage about 50' from the house. For ventilation i open the two windows, the one nearest the forge has a fan directed toward the window to try and suck a bit of the fume out. 

    The garage is unfinished. 

    With the windows open, would it be worth the time and money to go through and insulate the walls? I'm mostly thinking about the upcoming winter here. 

    I assume that the forge will put out a bit of heat for the garage, but will that all just blow out the windows either way? 

  5. To be honest, the quieting part is mostly for the neighbors, who haven't said anything yet. I don't terribly mind the bell sounds... Makes me feel like I'm being accompanied by a choir of really loud bell ringers. 

    Welive in the middle of town. Most of the neighbors are old folks. One house next to us is vacant. 

    I can't get at the base of the bolts. They're inside the center of the top plate. My only option for divorcing the two is to cut it off.... With a 4 inch grinder. 

    So what I'm understanding is that, barring that, welding it to the beam thing would only increase the sound. 

    If iI put some sand or dirt about the thin part of the beam it might help, especially if iI made a method of sound dispersal first. 

    Would it also help if iI filled the hollow wooden box on the bottom with the same? 

    I'm sorry, I'm not meaning to reject your thoughts, I'm just searching for the simplest way to make a bit of improvement without overhauling the whole setup. 

  6. It's mostly angles for why it looks so tall. It is a little higher than the recommended height, but iI haven't had any troubles with it there. 

    Second photo is from my chair,third  is the best iI can get for between the anvil and the beam. 

    It looks like they cut a hole in the beam at center and then bolted the anvil to this little plate and then welded the plate on the beam. 

    20151015_145222.jpg

    20151015_145251.jpg

    20151015_145307.jpg

  7. I've got a 4 inch angle grinder and a stick welder. 

    So you guys don't think that tightening it down to the top ofthe ibeam  will help? That was the theory that iI got before iI posted the pictures. 

    My plan was to tighten the anvil down and then fill between it and the beam with metal Anna weld like crazy.... 

    Then iu was going to fill in the sides of the beam with wood, probably glue it in and then strap it around the waist with steel. 

    Should iI discard that idea? 

    Edit : I'm notdrunk, my phone doesn't like typing here for some reason. 

  8. So iI should be trying to quiet the I-beam too. That's what iI was wondering. Looks like iI should make some chain then to try that. 

    Otherwise, along the lines of what frosty said, would it help if iI built a bit of a box around the beam and filled that with sand or dirt? 

    The beam has some nice flatspots sticking out that make nice upsetting ledges, so iI would prefer to find something other than removing it. 

  9. I know, this has come up a thousand times. 

    So I've read up on it and have tried magnets on the heel and horn. They work a little, but it now sounds like iI have a slightly smaller bell than before. 

    My anvil came from the in laws, who got it from someone else years ago. I imagine that this thing has changed hands a bit. 

    Anyhow, somewhere along the line it was cut off at the waist and mounted to a fairly tall steel iI beam. The bolts aren't firmly attached though, the anvil will Rock a bit. 

    Below the iI beam, iI mounted it on a box made from a laminated  beam on end. It walks a bit if I'm really going to town with the hammer or hitting in the ends

     

    Anyhow, the magnets only partially helped. Would iI better off to try and put some silicon between the anvil and the beam? Or maybe iI need a giant magnet... 

    Tested using welding magnets. 

  10. I'm a waiter on the weekends. My wife is a substitute teacher and we have a three year old little boy.... But don't tell him that, he thinks he's a big boy. 

    I've discovered 4 places in my life that iI lose track of time, one of them iI don't go to anymore. In my office working on computers, the forge, the bar, and playing video games.

    Oh... Does anyone else light the fire to make one thing and then find themselves with a pile of stuff they're working on and the sun going down? 

  11. That's a good idea... Will I need a cheater pipe for that? 

    I suppose that iI could hot start the scroll and then move to cold when I get beyond the space in my forge. 

    Come to think of it, iI have a decent sized ASO laying around that iI could drill a few holes in to for pegs. Hmmm

  12. I whipped up a fairly standard scroll jig yesterday... Haven't tested it yet, but iI think it'll work if I weld on a piece to grip on the vise. 

    I free handed a couple yard hooks for my mom, but wanted to be able to make them match a bit nicer. That got me thinking about shapes and jigs. 

    Anyhow, my forge isn't set up to easily handle big hook, without some major reconfiguring, so I've settled on a smaller one. Which is good too since it'll keep the weight centered over the pole instead of trying to stretch out and away. 

     

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