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Gergely

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Posts posted by Gergely

  1. 17 hours ago, littleblacksmith said:

    like the knife Gergely. It's always sorta nice when the customer wants a "rustic" look for knives, a lot less grinding involved! What's the guard made from?

                                                                                                                                             Littleblacksmith 

    Thank you, Mark! I cannot complain :) grinding is not my favorite thing... The guard was a piece of scrap 20x10m flat stock. Plain MS. Textured with the same hammer used on the "curly bark" candle holders. The customer saw those on my FB page and told me he likes them. Also he asked would it be possible to texture the blade surface with the same pattern. That was a no-no ;) blade heat treated already and all plus I think edged tools don't supposed to have that sort of deep texture in them. - Long story short I made the guard with this surface, and he liked it very much. Win-win.

    Bests:

    Gergely

  2. Finished this comission knife and handed it to the customer. (Pfuh, right on time... was a bit tight schedule.)

    I call this the Brutality Dagger :) it's a nice little beast. Overall length is around 13", blade length: 8", width: 2,5", max thickness: 1/4". It weighs 890g / ~2 lbs.
    The handle is composed of brass, hide, black walnut and copper. All upcycled materials. (And the customer demanded the surface style as it seems. No grinding except on the last 3mm of the edge. And heavily hammered texture. Was fun ;) )

    Bests:

    Gergely

    59d90e8c81bdc_201709kesvasstibor.thumb.jpg.de0837fad40cd2ebf56a6bbee697949c.jpg

  3. Dear Jim and All,

    I have pretty much the same tools for the task - weird, huh? ;) Only the ring part is applied to the bottom die of the power hammer. So it sits on a plate. The upper part is a plain cylinder, because my original tool was too big dia.

    Today I did my demo allright - no problems. But before that I managed to struck out six more tea light holders. (Not sold any one of them, it's the end of the month...)

    Bests:

    Gergely

    59ce98b9968e9_201709mecsesthat1.thumb.jpg.769d1c339423cdba5e39a1fcb9053ffe.jpg59ce98bb737fd_201709mecsesthat2.thumb.jpg.09785692825078c4ed0fb29b4aabda6a.jpg59ce98bd70179_201709mecsesthat3.thumb.jpg.e111a8a27645bc5f53a3d13ab134d449.jpg

     

  4. Thank you Guys and Gals for the nice words and for the help naming that thing :)

    The hand is all right, thank God, it's not the best, but hammering doesn't cause any pain. And overall it heals quickly.

    Yesterday after resting the whole morning I quickly hammered out 40 half done S-hooks for the kids to finish today at the demo. And a new set of PH tooling was made for tea light holder making. Today I'm testing it.

    Daswulf: for the weight of the stand - my mobile anvil stand has very sturdy construction (60x40mm heavy wall tubing and 3/4" plate) and it still weighs half of the stump I used to carry to demos. The stump was ~50kg/110lbs, the stand is around 25kg.

    Bests:

    Gergely

  5. Thank you, Guys, for the nice words!

    My original idea was the incense holder, I just thought it wouldn't be that popular around here. (But I'll give it a shot anyway from thinner stock.)

    Language related question: curly bark sounds amazing for identifying it, but I actually wanted to picture some pine shavings that curl at the thin end. Do you have any word in English for the thicker pieces of shavings? 

    And as for today shop work: proceed with some knives, but the bigger half of the day went to restoring tractor parts for my father-in-law. I badly damaged my hammer hand with a piece of wood which was struck by my brother-in-law with a sledge. The wood kicked back and injured the hand part where the thumb gets its strength. (Can't find better words, sorry. The lowest region of the thumb.) No wound but the inner tissues suffered nicely. I really hope I can hold a hammer tomorrow because at Friday I have demo to do...

    Bests:

    Gergely

  6. Hi lyuv,

    - what alloy did you use? common structural mild steel, or something else?

    - did you use borax or any flux?

    - did you somehow fix the two plate faces together so they stick together while in the fire?

    - have you welded smaller pieces (ie. rods) together with success and then tried this bigger and more difficult thing?

    I'm not sure about the size of the workpiece. Is it around 4" long and 2" wide. If so you need a quite effective fire to take it to an even welding heat (but not burn it).

    Bests:

    Gergely

  7.  

    The plates are 200mm(7.9")*200mm*10mm(0.4"). Any suggestions what to do with them? I was thinking of making a face for a portable hardy hole, but I'm not sure if the material is thick enough. 

    Hi MG,

    It's very useful to have 10mm plate around in the shop. Maybe not for a portable hole though. (Unless you weld together 2-3 pieces.) But you can build a guillotine tool. I think 10mm is enough for the structural wall thickness. You can find some 10-12mm thick leafsprings for dies, and as soon as you get the sizes of the die stock you can start the build... (I think you also can buy new springsteel, most likely 56Si7 as flat stock. That way once you have the first set of dies and built the frame around them you can buy exactly as much steel as you need. That's the time when new stock is cheaper then scrap :) )

    Of course this is just one way to go, that plate is very good for other stuff, too.

    Bests:

    Gergely

  8. 17 hours ago, littleblacksmith said:

    This is from last weekend, forged a couple hammers. These hammers I didn't have a striker for, but that morning I put together a blacksmiths guillotine, and so I just used that for it. Let me tell ya, those hammers take alot when your are using a hand hammer and not a 12 lb sledge! also a plant hanger and my first rams head that is on the handle of a dutch oven lid lifter.

    Nice work, Mark. Very nicely textured hanger. And I like the ball peen, too.

    Hopefully I get my half of the job done in this month :)

    Bests:

    Gergely

  9. My car drove me to the scrapyard, I really not intended to go there :) While I was there I thought it worth a look around. I need nothing anyways so only a quick screening...

    Well, almost like that... I came out with 240 lbs/110kg scrap steel and 114lbs/52kg machinist vise. 

    The vise is the big brother of my actual heavy duty machinist vise - and it is taking its place when the jaws are restored.

    I was very happy to find these ball shaped items, as I need some more texturing tools for the PH and couldn't find any big sphere shapes. The biggest is around 4" dia. 

    Bests:

    Gergely

    2017 09 gombocok.jpg

    2017 09 satu nagy testver.jpg

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