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I Forge Iron

olfart

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Posts posted by olfart

  1. On 3/11/2020 at 4:37 PM, Ohio said:

    Don't have pictures, but I have a picture...

    For_IFI.jpg.de5e1516e64ca65c2d6ed5085e1ea423.jpg

    Century Graphic 6x7, Ilford Delta 100, way too early in the morning and pretty dang cold. I can't remember the shutter speed but I believe the aperture was f/11.

     

    Excellent photo!  The shutter speed had to be a second or more unless that was some really FAST water.

  2. I used to go to SMU at the end of the spring semester and cart off the 8'  2 X 12 lumber and cinder blocks that were used as dorm bookshelves. The dorm supervisor was thrilled to get rid of them.  I've built furniture, goat sheds, barn stalls and lots of other stuff with them.  Still have quite a few in the barn loft.

  3. I was given one of those tools by The Dallas Times Herald when I got my first newspaper delivery route.  It was used to cut the wires holding the bundles of papers together.  If yours has loosened up to the point it won't cut wire, a couple of good taps on the hinge rivet might be in order.

  4. This month's project for our club is to make a Jonquil since our meeting this month will be at Old Washington State Park, AR, at the Jonquil Festival.  Here's my first attempt.  Needless to say it's 30 - 40 times the size of an actual Jonquil, but my arthritic hands don't let me do micro work anymore.  The material was from an old satellite dish.  The blossom was cold-formed, the cup in the center was heated and driven into a 3/4" nut, then heated again and driven into the Pritchel hole.  I had to grind off some of the uneven edge of the cup to make it relatively symmetrical.  The pistol was made by making a 3-way split in the end of the 3/16 rod and bending the ends out 90 degrees.

     

    Jonquil.JPG

  5. We had a couple of kids in the house in a large wire crate, but that was only for a couple of weeks while we got them bottle trained and healthy after mama turned them away.  No poop/pee on the floor that way, but it was a pain to change out the newspaper in the crate a couple of times a day.

  6. It'll be a while before our buckling and the two doelings are old enough to breed, but yes, we do plan to milk them.  We enjoyed the milk from our Nubians, having plenty to drink and make soap and cheese as well. The older does have had kids, and one was supposed to be in milk when we bought them, but she had mastitis.  I doubt her milk will be good for a while after the ToDay treatments.  We're still milking her out daily to get the medicine and the rest of the infection out.  When the oil disappears from the milk I'll give it a try and see if it's worthwhile.  Otherwise it will be about 13 months minimum before we have any more milk.

  7. A friend gave us a Nubian mother and kid many years ago.  They used to delight in jumping on the car.  I asked the friend how to stop that, and he replied, "Don't park in the goat pen, dummy!"  So that's when I built a pen.

    We're starting on our third herd now after selling our second Nubian herd last September.  This time around we're going with Nigerian Dwarf to save a little on the feed bills.

    This is BillyBob, the new buck (8 weeks old).

     

    BillyBob.jpg

     

    And Boots and Brandy (3 and 2 years old)

     

    Boots and Gina.jpg

     

    Finally, the twin does we picked up yesterday, Snow White and Cinderella (6 weeks old)

     

    Snow White and Cinderella.JPG

  8. I'm planning to twist the next one before cutting, which will produce more of a random pattern in vertical and horizontal components.  It would be interesting to see if I could isolate a twist to just the part that will be the arms, leaving the original straight lines in the vertical and twist in the horizontal. 

    Thanks for the ideas!

  9. I'm thinking that forging the arms octagonal and twisting may mess up the hole in the cross. It's pretty easy to get the arms out of alignment and distort the hole even without twisting.

    Thanks for the comments!

  10. As Doug Marcaida might say, "It will weld!"

    My first damascus billet is 11 layers, alternating mild steel and bandsaw blade.  Had a couple of small delaminations at the outer end of the billet, probably where it was cooled by the anvil before I got to that point with the hammer.  After working it down in thickness by about 1/3, I cut a slab off to make this cross.  Next project will be to beat the remainder of the billet round so I can twist it without having the corners make cold shuts.

     

     

    Damascus Cross.JPG

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