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I Forge Iron

Jackdawg

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Posts posted by Jackdawg

  1. On 10/13/2016 at 9:09 PM, Frosty said:

    Hey, I'll have you know I'm a proud purveyor of ONLY the highest quality braggin rights available anywhere! -_-

    Just ask me. ;)

    Frosty The Lucky.

    We have a saying in Australia for a certain type of tedious gentlemen that you find everywhere.

    we call them FIGJAM's

    stands for XXXXXXX   I'm Good, Just Ask Me

     

    :)

     

  2. cheers all, finished it off yesterday. Didnt grind out all the burn / hammer marks, just dressed up the pointy bits and had a go at quenching it and tempering back to a straw colour. It ended up about 10mm shorter and similar reduction in width to what I had before I burnt it.

    Straw colour on the working edge looks deeper in the photo's than it did in daylight when doing it,  but I am happy with a first go at it.

    Frosty burning wood and charcoal, playing with both, but yeah Australian hardwood gets nice and hot! Was using charcoal when I burnt the steel.

     

    finished 2.jpg

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  3. So, being a rank amateur when it comes to blacksmithing, I have been playing about a bit, soaking up info on the site and learning the lessons from a couple of other beginners who are traveling the same journey and have posted about their adventures recently, including the advice they got. So I think I finally reached the point where I am advanced enough to actually show my failures and share them :)

    I have been playing about with a couple of things, made a few S hooks tapers etc, then decided to make a set of tongs from reinforcing steel, and also making a cut off hardy tool from the end of a CV shaft. My anvil is only a little 20kg caste steel unit, so only has a small hardy hole, 13mm square.

    Gotta say my biggest issue until today has been my kak handedness and inability to visualise what it is I am making. (or attempting to make). Today I moved to a new level of "Oops"

    So today I got both the hardy tool and the tongs to the point where they were pretty rough, but at least functional and looked like a usable tool .

    I wanted to heat the hardy tool and let it cool gradually so I could finish it on the grinder, and I wanted to rivet my tongs. So now getting thoroughly cocky, I tried to work both in the fire at the same time, end result being I burnt both of them! The cutoff tool is salvageable, but wont look anywhere as good as it did, and will be somewhat shorter! (You can even see the shower of sparks coming off it in the photo, was like a fireworks show)

    The tongs, well the end of one side of them was just missing when it came out of the fire! There was enough left for me to at least practice putting a rivet in :) I think I managed to do the rivet quite well without stuffing anything up any more at least  !

     

     

     

     

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  4. Very nice.

    I had my first go at making a hardy tool the other day also. Only partly done before I ran out of steam, and not looking anywhere near as good as yours!

    I used the spline and threaded section from the outside of a CV joint. Probably twice the size it needed to be, which is one of the reasons I ran out of steam!

    First time I had tried to work anything with any sort of an amount of carbon in it, just about did in my foo foo valve trying to get it to move compared to the mild steel I have played with to date! - yes 2lb hammer swapped out for 4 lb hammer, including accompanying loss of hammer control and target acquisition capability :), resulting in the first two dent marks in my poor little anvil.

    Going to fire the forge back up today and give it some more love!

  5. On 02/10/2012 at 4:18 PM, forgemaster said:

    The best handles in Oz were/are made of spotted gum. Now I know that there are a lot of places in the world that have imported our eucalypts and some of them are now classed as noxious weeds by some countries. Is it possible to source some spotted gum, we have had no problems with it, straight grained, smooth, free from most defects, hard as blazes, we reckon its' equal to hickory.

    Phil

    Yeah, I reckon its hard to beat spotted gum. Ended up with some hickory handles a couple of years back when the Oz dollar was back where it should be against the greenback and we got a wave of tools in to the country from the US. Cant say I thought they were any better than the gum. Only issue was they had soem sort of black stain / wash painted on them

    Replaced the handle on a small ball pein the other day, all I could find in the small shaft size was some dodgy hardwood from Brazil in the ready made handle section of the local hardware store. Found 1 handle out of the 10 on display with no knots. Rasped to shape and sanded ok, but time will tell quality wise I suppose.

  6. We have not even bothered having a handset connected to our landline for the last 2 or 3 years. Service and quality was so bad.

    Wife, myself and kids all have mobiles, so no need for it. If it wasn't for the need for the internet connection I wouldn't have a landline at all. Our service is woeful, all the call centres go overseas to people whom english is definitely not their first language (or 3rd or 4th.....) our DSL is barely faster than the old dial up modems.

    Although having the number does come in handy for all those places that insist on you providing a valid phone number :)  - it will never get answered, but it is a valid number!

  7. Scored my self some more reinforcing steel to play with, cost me nothing!

     4 x 2m lengths of Y16 and 2 short lengths of Y28.

    One of the Y28's looks like it might have been painted with cold galvanising or similar zinc based paint, will probably give it a bath in something to strip it before adding it to my steel pile.

    reoscore.jpg

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