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I Forge Iron

Pault17

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Posts posted by Pault17

  1. Here are a few pictures of my first anvil (the one I dug out of my inlaw's property). No edges to speak of. When I found it, it looked like somebody had been cold-forging rebar for many years. not knowing a thing about blacksmithing, but being eager to get started, I borrowed my father-in-law's 7-inch grinder with huge stone cup and removed all the rebar markings. I then filed the top flat.
    I used this one for a year until I "upgraded" to my current russian submarine from HF - with the diagonal hardie hole (pita because all my hardie tools have to be custom made - ALL of them)

    post-734-0-40655700-1328105824_thumb.jpg

    post-734-0-73820700-1328105841_thumb.jpg

  2. Every year, for the past couple of years, a group of dad's with sons gets together at one of the dads' vacation cabin in the mountains of NC. two years ago, one of the mid-teen boys fashioned a dakota stove using cinder blocks covered with a large amount of dirt. The first year I showed them that providing additional air (two kids with paper plates, fanning vigorously) would get a piece of rebar glowing kinda orange, and if they stuck a splitting maul in a big stump, they could "forge" the re-rod into "something".
    that is now one of the looked-forward-to events with the boys

    I like the rocket stove idea for outside cooking. goes well with tripod over open fire.

  3. I haven't wrapped my mind around it yet, but I just went. for the first time, to a metal shop (BMG in Wilson NC). I talked with the warehouse manager a few days ago and told him that I am very small time and had never been in one of these places before. Most of the steel and wrought I have, I have literally found. occasionally, if I needed/wanted a specific size, I would go to one of the box stores and purchase. Well i got three sticks of 1/2 round, three sticks of 1/8 x 1, three sticks of 5/16 round, 1 stick of 5/8 square and three sticks of 5/16 coldroll. I paid a total of $48 all told. I don't know if I was mugged, but didn't feel like it. figured it works out to about 20-cents a foot, all told. I know if I bought the same from a box place the same amount would be 3-5 times that, so I was happy.

  4. rebar is similar to bed rails, and even railroad rails; scrap steel with more-than-mild carbon content. No pun intended, it is hit and miss as far as hardenability. I have some punches made from a section of #5 bar that hardened up nicely enough that I cut the bar into shorter lengths for use later.
    Oh, when talking rebar, the number denotes the eigth's of an inch - #3 = 3/8", 35 = 5/8", and so on. I use #4 and #5 for campfire tripods. I like the tent stake idea. I also do termite inspections, and made several 2-foot probing rods from a bunch of #3 I had, and gave them to other inspectors for Christmas gifts.

    P-James, the only dumb-ass is the one who says he/she already know's it all and can't learn from others. Ask away

  5. The forge, minus the dow-draft hood, is strikingly similar to the one we have at the state fairgrounds. We use the water trough for coal storage and keep a big slack tub in front of the forge.
    Beautiful score. I really like that hood for shop visibility too

  6. Edible, maybe. But it doesn't last long. It needs to be applied on hot metal. not everybody has a store of beeswax handy for retreating. If they can't, they know you can, ad after every other 'cue they will ask you to.

    Olive oil is easy to apply to warm metal (much like cast iron) and doesn't go rancid like some vege oils or animal fat. still gives a nice finish.

    just a thought

  7. Great first shot Dave. if they hold metal securely, they work. My very first pair was modeled after Glen's Son's blueprint. simple, straight forward and (in my case) BUGLY. but they hold very solidly and always have. I still use them for certain applications

    keep it up

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