Jump to content
I Forge Iron

ausfire

Members
  • Posts

    3,535
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by ausfire

  1. Great work on the vice, John. There is satisfaction in giving new life to something like that.

    Das, that guitar is coming along well. Do you anneal those saw blades before welding? I use them occasionally in sculptures but I find them hard to weld; they want to go brittle and snap. A slow cool in the forge seems to help.

    I'm still at work on the crocodile … another month or two yet.  Only problem is I'll need a crane to shift it. ^_^

  2. 9 hours ago, jlpservicesinc said:

    That right there is some mighty fine work..    I be thinking you got making these under control.. :) 

    Thanks, Jennifer. Yes, the first one (many years ago) took me all morning, Now I can knock them off in half an hour, or 45 minutes if you have to stop and explain the steps when doing them for demos. They are good demo pieces because there are so many different processes involved - splitting, bending, twisting, drawing out, punching etc. I often get the kids to turn the forge to heat the middle twist section where they are not likely to melt the horns off. Parents like to take videos of that.

     

  3. Thomas: Yes, some textures are not distinct enough for twisting. I chose this one because there was a sort of filleted look to the pattern (see left of Pic 1) and also two very strong opposing lines which could give a rope effect.

    It's sometimes good to add a twist to a long poker to add some interest to the long shaft, but after these trials, I am leaning towards the idea of leaving the pattern as it is.

    (Das, I had to look up H.R. Giger art. Wow! What's that guy on?)

  4. Rebar has a well-defined pattern and I wanted to know what would happen if it were twisted. As we are all aware it's not much use twisting round bar, but would rebar be any different? Wondering if anyone has managed to twist rebar in a way that makes interesting use of the pattern.

    Here's what happened:

    A tight twist, one direction. A bit of a mess:

    retwist1.thumb.JPG.88b36b4c5b94044c077c257bfd0292a1.JPG

    A light twist in a fullered section to define the twist. Ordinary.

    retwist2.thumb.JPG.6f4103197dbe1bf809658175d27fd671.JPG

    A long reverse twist. OK.

    retwist3.thumb.JPG.1005c501603bd489dba3b07459b31b29.JPG

    A squared section. Not much good as the twist loses the pattern on the steel. OK for contrast perhaps.

    retwist4.thumb.JPG.f8ac971c2e65aef39603b0555bd2d04d.JPG

     

  5. Frosty, I had a couple of your countrymen come by my forge today. Very nice people who were interested in the demo and had lots of questions.  The couple on the left come from Fairbanks, Alaska and the other two are from Seattle. They were happy to have their photo posted here.

    DSC_0210.JPG

  6. Rebar gets a bad rap, but it does make reasonable looking longhorn billy hooks when you run out of square bar. The pattern gives an industrial look and it does take a high polish. There are many different grades of rebar though and not all have the same working qualities.

    I did these two today and the one on the left is square bar for comparison. The hang up rings are flattened spring washers (cooled slowly!) and the middle one has a ring forged from an old wrought iron chain link. Easy ways to make rings.

    1554837752_rebarlifters.thumb.JPG.cca1a26a6261e4e54574837e4bd17ef8.JPG1228794957_rebarlifters2.thumb.JPG.766156e09822c6060a6fe43f035f4bdd.JPG

×
×
  • Create New...