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I Forge Iron

KRS

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Everything posted by KRS

  1. Beside the oil and everything, ventilate. In a heated shop the air humidity will be higher inside than outside. Warm air holds more water than cold air, Water will set where its the coldest Before leaving your shop in the evening ventilate it, let some dry cold air in and the warm damp air out. If you don´t the moisture will condensate over night
  2. Ask him to show you a youtube video from 1875 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oa_hiLXLbTc
  3. Thanks for the kind words You all know the guy at the flea market with a box of files, all thrown in? I cry every time... Alan, I think you misjudged the size, most are 100mm files, ~140mm total length. I put them in a drawer when I am done, for the regular files a rake system like yours is best practice, no doubt Keep them sharp Chris
  4. Could it be that you read it wrong? I think his question was how to make a good handle, where to get the steel. Not producing a blade without forging or removal. but the many other aspects: What makes a good grip, how to select the material, what kind of wood, how to make a sheath and so on? Edit: Not that information hard to find, at least to a point where one could draft a more specific question.
  5. Human sized Hamster wheel that powers a single naked light bulb
  6. If you are looking for software solution to organize digital files I am sorry, this is not the topic you are looking for I never had a satisfying solution to store my key files in way that -they don´t touch each other -they are visible so I don´t have to search very long -is cheap and fast to make -is extensible Behold, the Multichamber File Management System, MC-FMS: Over 40 files in those 2 displays. I used left-overs from some Multichamber roofing sheets, cut them to length and taped one side shut. Done.
  7. You should try it manually. if you would damage it with a cheater bar you will most likely damage it with hydraulics. The only difference is that you apply external force so you need to bolt it to the ground and make sure the stand is not too weak. And you have to do it steady for a nice bend, have it lubricated my 0.02$
  8. Your welding will improve a lot with proper preparation. Stick welding is forgiving but cleaning the surfaces always helps. Magnets will only help so much, it is better if you clamp it together before you weld: use your dies as spacers together with some sheet metal or paper, paper will burn and makes the removal easier
  9. Looks like a beast, but I am fine since I have the "small" rectangular from the catalog I posted. I found it the day before Christmas last year really cheap so I could not pass. The double-walled firepot design was the first I have seen In one of my oldest books for metal-working before I even started, but since then I rarely have seen those
  10. I have looked here and there but I cant find much on that kind of pot. Is the design dead? I know you can still get parts, but all new forges I found are single-walled. The difference with double-walled is that the firepot has cooling fins that are cooled from the air blown in the forge:
  11. KRS

    Baby vise

    Baby vises, eh? I can play that game, too. 40mm angle iron in the small vice. Double horn anvil on the baby vise
  12. 1907 Söding & Halbach. At least that is what I see on the chest
  13. Tis nothing but a scratch! It'll buff out
  14. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QEls4aoJYII Ask your parents before you play with fire.
  15. I don´t claim to work traditional per se, but if I would, I would explain it like that: I work in the tradition of blacksmiths where I use the best tool available for a job. The result may even be historical accurate, but the route I took to get there can be different. The only constant tradition in blacksmithing is progress.
  16. I once thought about a break that only holds it in top position: A second disc that is smooth on the surface, expect there where you want the break to stop the hammer. Never tried it, and it could somethimes give you one more strike until it stops, i think?
  17. I have seen a S&S with the same shape, the bick slightly lower than the face and the corners of the transit to the bick look much like it. Not 100% sure tough, because the markings should look like this: S (logo in a circle) S year weight Some other manufactures would have an additional stamp on the upsetting block.
  18. I guess its Sichelschmidt und Schlasse, is there a stamp on the upsetting block? Nice minion oven I guess its Sichelschmidt und Schlasse, is there a stamp on the upsetting block? Nice minion oven
  19. Take a good camera with you when you pick it up, just in case you have to document any damage from transport or inspection. Don´t know how well X-raying works with something massive like a power hammer.
  20. No Sticker, missing the wax-paper on top. Best I can do is 1$ /lb
  21. It was in this thread, you only have to go back one page where we talked about it. I think you are right, very well observed. Would I have said the same thing about a Blower with a external motor? Probably not. But I still think with a boxed fan like the one pictured it was valid.
  22. It´s was something I memorized years ago and kept watching for, maybe I have transferred it from pumps. It was wrong to make a generic statement based on habits I have developed While it might be less stress for the blower to reduce air-intake I doubt my open end solution is measurable worse, most load is when I close my gate for high airflow. As long as the motor is not cooled by the airflow I think both ways are practical, but if it is it can reduce the lifetime certainly
  23. I think I made a generalizing statement that is not applicable to that fan, I was thinking like frosty wrote that airflow is required for cooling. But you made your point clear, now I have to test it on my own fan...
  24. I do not reduce the input area but open a secondary output that blows in the room to reduce airflow. I think that this is better for the motor. Chris
  25. + Source: http://www.wisegeek.com/what-is-a-larding-needle.htm
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