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I Forge Iron

JHCC

2023 Donor
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Everything posted by JHCC

  1. Finished the metalwork on my new NARB; just need to make the mold for the refractory block and cast it. (Side note: the Mother of All Tinsnips made cutting the expanded metal a breeze!)
  2. Typo. Good catch. (And kudos for proper use of a photo in a quote!)
  3. Yeah, but I’m not sure ten pounds of white powder would have passed without comment or delay.
  4. Also had a package from Glenn waiting when I got home. Thanks, Glenn!
  5. Goodies brought home from this week’s business trip: Frosty T-burner parts and a chunk of 2” square tube for a NARB plenum (gifts from from IFI member LouL — thanks, Lou!) for me, and yarn for Lisa. (Lou was going to give me some Cast-o-Lite 30, but we decided that that would REALLY have freaked out the TSA.)
  6. Nice looking blades. Looking forward to seeing how the finished knives come out.
  7. Terrific interview, and very informative. Nice to see your softer side!
  8. I gave my hammer a wooden wedge, but it wooden wedge. So I gave it a steel wedge, and it steel wooden wedge.
  9. Had a nice visit with LouL, who showed me his in-progress forge and NARB. We threw together a quick Frosty T-burner from some of the spare parts.
  10. You’ll find it rings much less than a solid steel anvil or one with a wrought iron body and steel face. Vulcans have a decent reputation, even if they’re not exactly highly sought-after. Certainly better than your HF ASO, and worth a good bit more than what you’re paying!
  11. Thank you! The treadle hammer makes splitting the reins so easy (even easier now, with the added weight in the head) that almost all of the work lies in preforming, shaping, and fitting the jaws. (I should add that while these are functional, I’m not very happy with how the nibs came out. I’ll just have to make another pair....) That would be nice. I learned forge-welding back in the day, but I am horribly out of practice.
  12. Here’s a pair I made from a pair of twist tongs that didn’t work out and some chunks of 1-1/4” round. And speaking of tongs, the cold shut on the offset tongs turned out to be a surface issue only, so that’s good news.
  13. At least your lesson doesn't involve scalpels and antibiotics!
  14. No luck on the eyepatch, alas. Arrrgh, me harrrties! "Miserable John" will be my blues guitarist name. If it had been worse, I might even have been "Blind Miserable John". Dodged that bullet, though.
  15. One thing I did not immediately realize I had done in the shop yesterday was to get a sliver of metal in my eye. That tiny dot = PAIN. Even if it’s just a quick knocking off a burr, wear your safety glasses, people! Big thanks to my eye doctor for getting it out.
  16. Oh, I have no doubt about it; see the link I posted about the Lake Pontchartrain Causeway. I'm just saying (speaking as someone whose training is in language rather than engineering) that "drive a pile" might be used in a non-technical, informal sense as well as the technical "drive it into the ground by hitting it" sense. No worries.
  17. Also, to "drive a pile" could presumably be understood in the non-literal sense of simply "installing a pile".
  18. Louisiana. The piles that support the Lake Pontchartrain Causeway are 54" diameter tubes of prestressed concrete. See https://www.asce.org/project/lake-pontchartrain-causeway-bridge/.
  19. No worries. Now that it's taken apart, can you give us some photos of the interior? Like Frosty, I've never seen a coal forge like that one. (PS. Had the most hideous time getting my (anthracite nut coal) fire lit yesterday. Forgot how much kindling it takes to get the stuff going.)
  20. Hmm...wondering if I should have taken post-glacial rebound into account when designing my anvil stand....
  21. Harder to do with split-rein tongs, but not impossible.
  22. BECAUSE I'D GET TO MAKE ANOTHER PAIR!!! Seriously, though, I'll have to see how it works out. They may be perfectly adequate; I just have to see how deep the crack goes and how much metal is left after filing. This was my first pair with this type of nib, and I'd be happy to give it another try.
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