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I Forge Iron

windancer

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Posts posted by windancer

  1. I will not light the forge again until I redo the gas inlet. And were I to light it before that it would not be long enough for it to happen again!
    The explosion is unburned gas igniting- and could well be enough to cause damage to the burner and unleash the gas through a break or crack.
    I have no idea about the timing of subsequent occurances- I instantly turn it off.
    I tried to talk with Ron at the last conference we both attended. His ONLY input was that I should buy one from him and throw away the one I bought from the ribbon burner place [can't think of their name right now].
    Because I posted the full saga a couple years ago I am certain everyone was following my adventures.
    What I would like is pictures of other ribbon burner forges that are working properly.

    I only know that I am one of very few folks who have this problem :)
    Since almost all the others are woring without the detonations, and the burner came from a company who specializes in burners, the things that may be different about mine is the setup- which is why I asked about pics.
    I appreciate everyone trying to help and taking the time to think about this and post up a reply. I really do.
    But I think that pictures of other setups are the only thing that may help.

    Thanks,
    Dave

  2. I built a ribbon burner forge a couple years ago. I don't use it because of the explosions. They generally start after the first 45 to 60 minutes of use.

    I posted the problem many places, did a ton of searches. I found a very few similar problems but none were ever resolved.

    I have about $700 into the forge plus it takes up a lot of vaulable room. I currently use a smaller forge sitting on top of it.

    This has been on my mind for the last couple years. The forge works beautifully and is way more than capable of forge weldingnas well as forge welding without flux. I would like to be able to use it :)

    After using the forge for 45 minutes or an hour therer is a large VERY LOUD explosion in the forge- about the same as a .22 rifle going off in your ear. I have tried everything anyone thought might be causing it. When this happens it is extremely startling. So it has sat without even being light for ages now.

    The only thing I can come up with is that maybe my gas post is too close to the burner inlet, and that maybe it needs to be furher away from the burner. I am wondering if this may be causing the problem. I may just add some more pipe and see if it stops the problem. I would not even be comfortable selling this geat forge to anyone the way it is. I am sure these explosions are very dangerous.

    Any one here have experience with ribbon burners? How long is your pipe between the gas inlet and the burner? Pic would be a huge help to me!

    Dave

  3. I have an old Stewart Handy worker from around the turn of the century. Mine sits on an old milking stand and I LOVE IT!
    I pet it sometimes on my way by.
    May work for small stock, but if you had things to fix and nowhere to work these were just the ticket :)
    Probably sold by Sears... back in the day.
    Some things don't need to be useful- just beautiful is enough.
    Dave

  4. You left out a step most knifemakers use: Rough Grind and Finish grind. The rough grind usualy takes the blade edge down to the thickness of a nickel or so. Then heat treat and temper, then the final edge is ground. The rough grind leaves you enough meat to avoid [usualy] warping during heat treat. The stock should be removed in eaqual parts to each side: two passes on the front, twopasses on the back. Being careful to get the grind centered also helps prevent warping/twisting.
    Get after it- this is not a spectator sport :)
    Dave

  5. John, one more thank you for puting this together. I have been kind of monitoring this topic for the past couple years. Nice to have this all in one place :)

    I recently went on a Damascus 'binge' and did nothing but make Damascus for about a month. Figured if I was gonna make a mess of my forge lining I would get my money's worth. Ate the entire guts out of my forge and it still needs relining, along with another piece of kiln floor [the flux ate that too with so many welds being done one after another].

    Does the flux-free Damascus welding eat up the forge, maybe from the long hours of high temps, John?

    Dave

  6. One option would be a curve radius on the platen. They are fairly common and work fairly well, but they are hard on belts. Find a curve the size you like and bolt it on.
    I added a spindle sander fairly early on in my knifemaking. You can get many sizes and grits for the sleeves and eliminates having to change set ups on your grinder.
    I had no luck using the off-end of my Grizzly for anything but buffing.
    Let us know what you end up doing :)
    Dave

  7. My first 2x72 was a Grizzly and oaid for most of my other tools by selling the knives made on it. I also have a KMG variable speed. The Grizzly still gets used every time I am in the shop. Not perfect but also not2 or 3 thousand dollars.
    Thqt is a fine looking first knife :)
    Dave

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