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I Forge Iron

SFC Snuffy

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Posts posted by SFC Snuffy

  1. Take a look at Mark Aspery's video on forging a pass-through handle corkscrew from a single piece. If well-done, could be a great gift and cool way to open the champagne.

     

  2. Don't be afraid to file, sand, or grind your opener (or any other project) before applying a finish. The rough texture around your opener on the right could have been smoothed out to present a nicer look without detracting from its hand-hammered appearance.

    Punches will serve as a drift to open up your hole until you can get a purpose-made drift, just be sure to cool them after drifting. If you have an anvil with a horn, the point of the horn/bick can be used to round out the loop. I will usually flatten the top of the loop by hitting down on the bottom of the opener. In your case, you'd need to finish the loop before doing the leaf.

    Here's one I recently did. I'm trying to decide if I want to put a wooden handle on it. Please excuse the lousy picture!

    20180612_181141.thumb.jpg.630260242e9bae7310979c690c4b3672.jpg

  3. Having spent a great deal of time in the US Army and Army National Guard, monitoring both my health and that of my Soldiers through a variety of exertions and enterprises, a few points to consider, in no particular order:

    • Prime indicator of your state of hydration is the color of your urine. A "light straw color" is considered optimal. Darker means not enough water. Lighter means too much.
    • Drinking too much water (hyponatremia) can kill you. Your electrolytes become too diluted and your brain and body lose the ability to communicate. Treatment requires hospitalization, but the symptoms can be difficult to differentiate from heat exhaustion.
    • A balanced diet with plenty of fruits and vegetables is the best way to supply and replenish electrolytes. Sports drinks are almost universally bad for you and caffeine is both a diuretic/natriuretic and raises your blood pressure, undesirable side effects in high heat environments.
    • Environments with very low or very high humidity will affect both how much you sweat and how much you feel like you are sweating. See point one above.
    • There is no "right answer" for how often you should urinate, as there are too many variables unique to each individual. However, see point one above.
    • Removing clothing (short- vs. long-sleeves, shorts vs. trouser, bare head vs. hat, sandals vs. boots, etc.) makes you more comfortable but often increases the rate of evaporation of sweat from your skin and thus your rate of dehydration. You'll feel better, but lose water faster.
    • Sodium tablets can be used in emergency situations, but it's better to eat foods like canned olives, pickles, and tuna which have nutritional value.

    TL; DR = Pay attention to your pee. :rolleyes:

  4. Spent some time in the rain upsetting donated automotive steel (it came with the appellation "tie rod," but no make or model) into a more usable form; it will eventually become an small axe or tomahawk. We managed to collapse the total length by about half, and the striking anvil worked great, though it's starting to sink into the mud a bit.

    20180619_143551.thumb.jpg.88d8cf4438ee84d924eaaef26d1ec4df.jpg 20180619_140205.thumb.jpg.4a4fffb8769fbe49aa4f53734a41f9e0.jpg

  5. So you leave the center square enough for the shifting spanner to get a good grip. Very nice!

    I've seen a similar large jig on here where they welded the crescent wrenches to some sort of adjustable collar, which was then fit over a length of black iron pipe or square bar (I don't recall which). With the pipe clamped in a vise, the two supports could be moved back and forth to allow as large or as small an area to be twisted as desired. Rather ingenious, really.

  6. I've been reading a lot lately (seen a few videos as well) about how making leaves is a great learning tool for beginner blacksmiths, so I tried my first today. Predictably, it's not very good but I'll learn and keep trying. I made a bottle opener to make myself feel better and try out my new guillotine tool.

    20180612_180829.thumb.jpg.d21f241245e7a9f5da0749399e95d330.jpg20180612_181141.thumb.jpg.5694ba3fea5a5733c323daee199e473c.jpg

    20180612_180852.thumb.jpg.8ebe60a0fa536f894a83a25d698dab0a.jpg

    The wax finish on the opener looks better IRL (the leaf looks just as bad :D).

  7. JHCC, that's an impressively-sized swage! What sort of interior dimension do you have, and how big do you want/need your starting stock to be?

    Nick, I made a couple of similar choppers for family members and had many of the same issues with cold shuts. The one that I started for myself I snapped the handle/"tang" right off of it. I'll probably make it into an ulu, but for now it's languishing in project limbo.

  8. On ‎5‎/‎23‎/‎2018 at 3:10 AM, Shabumi said:

     Symbolizing the meeting of the sun and the horizon, or the heavens meeting the earth.

     Oh no, I just realized I said the famous last words 'looks simple enough'

    I've also understood it to represent male and female genitalia, though to be fair that could certainly be a misunderstanding of the symbolism.

    As far as 'looks simple enough,' I wish you the best of luck! :D

    ausfire - Looking good!

  9. On 4/21/2018 at 10:15 PM, 19Branden86 said:

    Thanks. Further south of Salina. Lyons

    You're about four hours away from me. If you ever need a striker on a big project, send me a message and I'll see if I can't get away for a day trip. Are you a member of the Free State Blacksmith Club?

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