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I Forge Iron

Jasent

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Everything posted by Jasent

  1. I like to stamp both sides in case I cut a peace off
  2. My slack tub is frozen every morning. I just put it on top of the forge till it steams and the ice is gone. Anvil warms up after the first few heats. We did make it up to 39f today view from the smithy this morning during the 15 min of sunshine we had
  3. I haven’t plugged the holes permanently yet. Just stuck some chunks of 1/4” round in the holes for the test. I do believe your right about trimming the mig tip as it is a bit long/past center slightly. I’ll play with the tip and get it running a little more closer to neutral before I come back to the nozzles holes. Thank you for your input.
  4. Welcome. We’d love to see some of your work. We love pics!
  5. I’m surprised, been told I will put hair on your chest ,Bear oil does have many uses still applicable today: it makes an excellent leather conditioner, it can be substituted for lard in nearly any recipe especially for pastries, it makes a great lamp oil (smokeless), can be used as a lubricant for metal (including firearms), it can be used to make soaps, and it can be used to treat skin issues such as: dry skin, chapped skin and as a salve alone or as a base, and makes great pemmican!
  6. Thank you cgl. Bear oil has many uses. Was used like money at one point. Not so common anymore. Thinking about bear makes me hungry for huckleberry pie. Only had a hour in the shop so I didn’t get to finish the hammer. Hopefully tomorrow I can get it done and start another using a different method
  7. It was pretty quick, doing another today the same way. The bear oil works great. Season all my own stuff with it! Also makes the best hash browns
  8. Thank you. I’ve got about 4’ of this steel left over. Going to put it to use
  9. Haven’t been able to test the coconut oil thought we had some but I was wrong Made a 2.25lb straight peen yesterday solo. Finished ht today Punched and drifted with the one tool shown. Slug on top. S7
  10. Thank you for clarifying. I’m liking this method, no worries about crooked eyes. I’ll give it a go tomorrow
  11. I’m a bit confused. You started with saying you just need one round punch but then say you need multiple sizes of round punch? How many round punches do you use and what increments do you step up to i do like the idea of keeping it round then squishing it to oval as that negates the chances of having a crooked eye
  12. Lol that’s a typo. 18 after plugging 3. I will trim a little bit at a time till it neutrals out. I dout co can build up in my shop with 3 walls but why chance it. Flame is more blue in person but the camera always changes the color For some reason you can’t even see all the flames in the pic
  13. The op has never even heated a peace of steel. A class is a good recommendation. I make my hammers exactly as you describe except I like oval and not round
  14. Sure you don’t need a drift. You can punch the eye to the shape you want. You don’t need special tongs just ones appropriate for the stock your using. No need to do anything to the cheeks. Also you can forge the round face or grind it. But as you said the “ Brian “ rounding hammer is popular and the majority of new Smith’s that plan to make hammers have that very design in mind. And why not, they are beautiful hammers. Personally I’ve never made that style but I would like one. I agree that punching a hole is a very basic skill no matter the stock. I just imagine a large chunk of steel with a punch permanently upset in it if it was the very first project. There is some skills required to be learned before attempting to punch a hole in large stock. Jmo based off my limited experience jlp i re read your post and some how misunderstood it as saying it was a good first project. Now I see you where basically saying the same thing as I.
  15. I would agree that making a hammer should not be a first project. First you need punches and proper tongs, drift, hardy tools, etc. once you've made all the tools you’ll need you should have enough experience to accept your failures, and learn from them. I think my first hammer was a 10oz cross peen. Tiny little thing but I learned a lot. Was probably my 10th project (just a guess with out visiting the thread to check). My first hammer I used was a framing hammer that I ground smooth. It worked fine till I got better options.
  16. Personally I really enjoy making hammers solo. It really isn’t that difficult. Once you figure it out it’s not much different from punching a hole in any thing and then drift it to proper shape and size. Then from there it’s up to you how you finish it. I’m no expert by any means. But I do have drive and a lack of help.
  17. My biggest fear is my wife to be will sell all my tools and guns for what I told her they cost Making a list is a good idea! congrats TP.
  18. I’ll test it tonight. I know it has a high smoke point so temp will probably need raised
  19. I have never used BLO on anything that touches food. Just recently started using it on decorative stuff. Before that I just used canola oil on everything i do have some bear oil I should try. It’s great for cooking!
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