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Gergely

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Posts posted by Gergely

  1. Thanks again, Thomas! This is really valuable help.

    If the jaws don't fit "looking from the top" is it possible to grind them to fit?

     

    And I was thinking: have seen 30 or so post vises in Hungary, and only one had the leg. It was cut off from all the others. I can't imagine why.

     

    Gergely

  2. Dear All!

     

    I'm considering to buy a post vise which is pictured below. Its price is reasonable (even in Hungarian circumstances) and takes place not too far (again in Hungarian sense). I just don't know too much about recognizing flaws of vises. 

    Unfortunately the pictures are not too good. But if you can tell anything about it I'd really appreciate it.

     

    Thank you for your effort.

     

    Greetings:

     

    Gergely

     

    post-48601-0-49499200-1401260434_thumb.j post-48601-0-21022000-1401260441_thumb.j

  3. Ouch!! Aus, that hurts!! I'm in a quiet working environment so can't explain my pain as John did! 

     

    My only help to release this pain is to think about how much more painful it would be not having time for forging all those nice materials. (Which is my constant trouble.)

     

    Let me quote Jim here:

    Forge on and make beautiful things!

     

    Greetings:

     

    Gergely

  4. My vote goes to the angle grinder, too. You can cut, grind, sand, wirebrush with it on metal, stone and also wood (using it properly).

    Safety is an issue: goggles, long sleeves, some sort of mask when doing longer job, maybe tight gloves, clean environment and knowing what you're doing.

     

    Nice catch on the flat stuff!

     

    Greetings

     

    Gergely

  5. Been looking for a pipe for a chimney for a few months now.

     

    Today at the scrapyard, 6 meters long, 220mm diameter and 4mm wall thickness.

     

    One third of the price I was quoted for a new chimney. It will probably outlast me.

    Nice find, congrats!

    BTW been there:

     

    I was looking for a suitable chimney for months, too. Only found a big hood-like thing cut from an old grain elevator (?). Then once I mentioned it to my father-in-law, who has already gained the good reputation as nr1 Maecenas of my smithing intentions. He called me to visit the local flour mill, where he works and we managed to find a complete set to build a chimney. Hood part: 44 cm dia pipe on solid stand which bears the whole chimney. Chimney part: 3 pieces of 33 cm dia pipe with attaching collars. Plus a "rain cap" on the top. He even had it installed, I just had to tell the instructions. Am I being spoiled or what?

     

    No pics yet because it got ready on Monday and I just tested it yesterday: got the camera with me but no time to take any pictures, there was too much fun. It's soooo good not have any smoke in the shop.

     

    Bests:

     

    Gergely

  6. Hi Rob,

     

    Welcome and congratulation on the stuff you got. Those look really great - the wiser may tell more on the details but I think you got pretty nice gear. The anvil looks quite unused, some chips on the edges, which do not matter:  it's useful in all ways. I especially envy the postvise, it's beautiful.

    Make a basic coal forge quick from scrap and fire it up to put these babies into use. (Here you find the how to-s about building a forge:

    ?do=embed' frameborder='0' data-embedContent>)'> )

     

    Best wishes

     

    Gergely

     

  7. I like it very much just the way it is. Both the shape of the blade and the rugged design on it with the grooves.

    Can you give the "technical data" on it. Blade length, thickness,OAL, etc.

     

    Thanks for sharing.

     

    Greetings

     

    Gergely 

  8. Hi Natkova,

     

    Try the local scrapyard for springs, bearings and axles, as Frosty mentioned. At the beginning these are the objects you can do all the tooling and axes and stuff from:

     

    post-48601-0-33682100-1399884235_thumb.j post-48601-0-48874200-1399884248_thumb.j post-48601-0-74950700-1399884260_thumb.j post-48601-0-72292900-1399884266_thumb.j post-48601-0-97884700-1399884276_thumb.j post-48601-0-47711800-1399884284_thumb.j post-48601-0-12041900-1399884297_thumb.j post-48601-0-83069600-1399884311_thumb.j post-48601-0-81461900-1399884321_thumb.j post-48601-0-45849600-1399884333_thumb.j

     

    Caterpillar track pins of old tanks are one of the best material you can find in Eastern-European scrapyards. Rare find though.

     

    Happy hunting

     

    Gergely

  9. I like to have a horse's, a cow's and a deer's skull around in my shop. I got them as a child and haven't seen them for almost two decades. They have some comforting connection to the past in this new and very strange environment.

     

    Greetings

     

    Gergely

  10. This was my first sold item.

    The cashier girl of the local scrapyard ordered it for her boyfriend's birthday. It's his name. Starting stock was 6 mm round, the letters are 11,5 cm high, the bottom is 32 cm long 4 x 30 mm flat.

    The price (about 15$) paid for a good 40 kg of coal. It maybe was a low price, but later when I took some scrap steel to the yard and she was in charge of scaling it a surprisingly big weight was measured. :)

     

     

    post-48601-0-11103100-1399624227_thumb.j

  11. Well, yesterday was a pretty good day.

    Recently I have had some health problems and then there was a diagnosis of Crohn's disease. My physical condition has dropped in the last few weeks, and I was mentally down quite good, too. 

    Anyways I decided that Sunday I gotta go to the shop and kick Crohn's xxx a bit. I needed a chair to sit down while the steel was in the fire, but I did it. 3 solid forging hours, even if I did only light work. 

    My moral got pretty lifted up since that. Hopefully I can continue in long term.

     

    Bests to all:

     

    Gergely

  12. Hi All,

     

    and thank you for your help! There is a quite new vocabulary which I need to learn first to understand all of this but it's just more fun  :)

    I will definitely check owwm.org, thanks VaughnT!

    Judson Yaggi: thank you for the pictures, those I understand almost completely  :D 

     

    I try to keep the lathe thing slow, I have had so many new fields in my life lately.

     

    Greetings

     

    Gergely

  13. Hi Robert,

     

    That sounds like a very good idea. I just don't know how: 

    post-48601-0-35510000-1397720266_thumb.j post-48601-0-17937000-1397720272_thumb.j

     

    The headstock material is in the way on both sides of the spindle cone (are these the right words?). I don't want to cut off pieces from the headstock trying to preserve the original state of the whole.

    Is there any way to make changes keeping the preserving in mind?

     

    Bests:

     

    Gergely

  14. Thanks Frosty and IronDwarf!

     

    I consider myself lucky on this. 

    And thanks for the chuck tip - I don't know almost anything about lathes, but it's time to change that! Unfortunately it will take some time til I get it working. I have to build some sort of top axle holding structure. Then turn the whole thing 90' clockwise, and it weights 1,4 tons. Only after that I can learn the how to-s.

     

    Greetings

     

    Gergely

  15. So my father-in-law told me once he wants to show me something, and I can decide then whether I want it or not. 

    As you can see from the pictures it was really hard to resist. So I did not. He even got it delivered to my shop. I really can not complain.

    It's an antique top belt driven lathe from 1920's. In working condition, only have to install the top belt axle and the new main motor (5 kW) above the machine. And I need some big belts.

     

     

     

    post-48601-0-59158800-1397641919_thumb.j post-48601-0-41754100-1397641941_thumb.j post-48601-0-37874000-1397641952_thumb.j post-48601-0-31484900-1397641967_thumb.j post-48601-0-74365700-1397641978_thumb.j

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