LawnJockey
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Posts posted by LawnJockey
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Cave Creek is one of the areas we are looking at.
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781, thanks for the info. I will be in Phoenix that week end. Maybe I can slip away from looking at various neighborhoods, etc with the family. I'll have to run that by the boss.
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Frank, thanks and thanks again for the H-B.
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well I thought ??? I was bad enough to get a bag or 2 of coal LOL guess not :unsure:
I had a neighbor come over the other evening after she had had a few glasses of wine. She asked me if I could spare some coal for her step sons. Of course I complied but then after a few more glasses of wine she changed her mind.
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What is going on blacksmithing wise in the greater Phoenix area? I am starting the process of relocating there. I have no idea as to where we will end up as that will be driven by the best school for my youngest son to finish high school.
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I got to spend a week with my grand kids back east, that was priceless. As far as physical gifts are concerned my daughter gave me an apron. Then there were lots of books, etc. Big news came on Christmas eve, we are moving to Arizona from California. My wife finalized a job change and a big step up. She starts February first and I will stay in California until the kids finish the school year in June. Between now and then lots of work getting the place ready to sell and moving.
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Merry Christmas to all. It is a good day, as good as any, to pause and think about what is really important in life.
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Proper laying around techniques take a lifetime of practice to properly refine. Give her a break, teach by example. Don't be overly critical if she doesn't catch on too fast, not everyone is gifted.
Merry Christmas
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My taste for older tech goes beyond guns although I have an interest in them, particularly single shot rifles. I have a couple of 45-70s, one is a rolling block. I cast for them and my 32-40 CPA and also pistols. I also have some Martinis. I have a passion for older tools and wood boats. In my misguided youth I loved bumming around in 3rd world countries admiring their simple solutions to mechanical things. At one point I had a commercial fishing boat with a single cylinder Hicks engine in it. I believe it was the last licensed commercial boat using a make "n" break engine in California, unless some other fool has tried it after me.
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We are getting this place ready to sell so I don't have time to let them age on their own. I have done some looking around on the Net and it looks like vinegar is the ticket. The cabinets are dark stained oak (built by the former owner a cabinet maker), the counters are a grayish brown granite and the appliances are stainless. We are going to refresh the cabinet finish with tung oil. The floors will be saltillo tile and the walls will be a pearl finish white to brighten things up a bit.
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Great ideas. I think I will start with an acetone cleaning to remove any polish residue. There isn't any laquer so remover is probably over kill. I will order a couple of extras to experiment on.
Thanks
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I am doing a quickie kitchen job and I want solid brass drawer pulls but not that shinny 80s polished brass look. I have located the drawer pulls I want, they are cast brass and polished. They don't have that ugly laquer finish. What I would like to do is dull the polished finish and let use polish them over time as it will. Anyone have any experience doing something like this?
Thanks
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Cut around the center on the end you are not using and then pull it apart. Once apart the shaft will be fully exposed to cut with a saws all, grinder, plasma cutter, torch or whatever.
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Agreed Thomas, my interest in firearms ends around 1950, just before things started to be made cheaper. Machines make AR-15's ,craftsmen made Mauser Broomhandles and Trapdoor Springfields.
My interest ends closer to 1911.
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I hate the garbage being produced today. A few years ago the wife purchased a new washer and dryer. The stuff feels like it is ready to fall apart already and this was high end stuff. At my little off the grid place I go to great lengths to avoid buying that garbage. My kitchen cabinets are old high school science lab cabinets. For plumbing fixtures I had a plumbing contractor friend save fixtures he was tearing out for me. All cast iron, ceramic and brass. The only new item is the on demand hot water heater and that is the only item that gives me trouble. I would post photos but I can't get photos to upload.
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I'll be in the DC area and I am always looking to learn from others.
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Nice shop. I wish I would catch the neatness bug. If I did my vocabulary would instantly become less colorful. Jobs would go much faster as the finding misplaced tool time would go down greatly, so would my blood pressure. They say the key to a successful marriage is two phrases, "Yes Dear" and "I'm working on that". I can honestly say I have been working on shop neatness and organization and I am getting better. Your photos remind me I have a ways to go.
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Good to hear, all the best.
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Well, after all it is a boring subject.
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Thank you, that answers my question.
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I just purchased a ATHA handled punch that I am am going to reshape as a slotting punch. I am new to the wizardry of heat treating so I am wondering if this should be heat treated and if so, how should a slow minded aspiring smith approach it?
Thanks in advance.
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Another option is to purchase old well pipe for the in the ground pieces and frame the structure like a pole barn.
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A proper stand for the 300 pound HB I purchased from Frank.
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I have one of those Alaskan Mills made by Granberg that attaches to my chain saw. I used it for cutting 1' x 12" x 10' planks and I was surprised how well it worked. I was cutting fir and after the first cut is done it took me about 10 minutes per plank. You use a ripping chain for these cuts. I think I paid about $250 for it and I am sure they can be found for half that used.
Blacksmithing in the Greater Phoenix Area
in Blacksmithing, General Discussion
Posted
Yep, that is why choice of schools is so important to us. He will be the last one at home and he has three years to go. His grades are stellar and he participates in all sorts of school activities. During the summers he has done camps for everything form blacksmithing to cooking. In June he will test for his black belt. He is a good kid and we want it to stay that way. We are also looking at the BASIS Charter schools and we have entered their lottery. It seems a little crazy that you have to win a lottery to get your kid in a good school. There is always private but then again you have to win the lottery to do that too.
The school thing is so important to us that we are even willing to rent for a few years in a housing development with a busy body HOA and postage stamp sized lots, my personal idea of Hell as that would mean no shop. If we have to take that distasteful route we would use the time to study the area and buy or build what we want for when the schools are not an issue to us. For me that would mean my smithing would be limited to classes, etc, for a while. My off the grid place is 6 hours away from Phoenix I can always build a barn there for my shop for the next few years.