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I Forge Iron

Goods

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Posts posted by Goods

  1. Frosty, just so you know I didn’t take you post in any kind of negative way! I just had to comment in the post from Jennifer. I liked the sentiment. Is not about being perfect, it’s all about learning and getting better!

    Also, can you post or PM me more pics of the dachshund figure head. My wife would love that!

    Keep it fun,

    David

  2. Very well said Jennifer! 

    Personally, I’m always trying to do better, and can see all the flaws in what I have done. It doesn’t upset me, it just makes me think about what to do differently next time: a bit more with the butcher bush, a bit more planishing(sp?) to save time with the file or grinder. I read up on IFI and listen to what experienced smiths have to offer. I find it very rewarding. I’m in this as a hobby, money from sales is nice, but the compliment from a happy customer is better. Best of all is the focused-almost-meditation of swinging the hammer, making the material move the way I want. I usually leave the smithy a much happier person.

    Keep making beautiful things everyone!

    David

  3. Looks like a housing for a ribbon burner to me?

    I’m not an expert by any means, but I would recommend higher carbon steel for the faces. They are fairly small pieces and with very low carbon in the wrought iron, due to carbon migration, there may not be much carbon left in those after several welding heats.

    Just my two cents...

    David

  4. You could try case hardening it. Put it in a black pipe packed with coke dust and leave it in the forge while working on another project. It could get the carbon content up significantly in that small of a cross section, or it could just ruin it. I’ve personally never tried it.

    David

  5. You can develop a lot of force with a ratcheting type arbor press. The general design can be seen on several catalog item type sites. They are expensive to buy and probably a bit complicated to home build.

    David

  6. Hefty, you may be able to fuller the cheeks now. Very little chance of the slit welding shut. You’ll need something as a bolster and need to be careful to forge both sides evenly, but it could be an interesting approach.

    David

  7. Clint, I like the battery setup! Many members talk about using foot switches, but I would wire in a simple on/off switch, that way you can set it where you need it and not worry about having to reset it after you put your stock back in the forge. I haven’t put a switch on mine (yet), but from attending our hammer-ins and visiting others forges, the habit of turning off the blower is well established in me. I tend to work with large stock, so the heating time is long and used to get ready to the next forging steps. A foot switch would get annoying quickly.

    Just my experience, David

  8. Billybones, not sure about that end for furniture legs. If the leg come down to a radius like that is may be a bit bouncy with a heavy slab top. An upset 90 degree corner might be more stable.

    No forging to speak of, but I lit the forge yesterday and cooked down quite a bit of 20 mule team borax. I knew the volume would be reduced, but it’s really surprising to me just the same. Also, from those who have done this, did it turn out right? It ended up almost a black/brown glass, then gray when ground down. (Used about 1/3 to 1/2 a box of borax and cooked it off in an old cast iron pan. Then, chipped the glass out with a hammer and chisel, and finally ground it in a cheap 2nd hand “bullet” type drink blender. Took three batches to get the quantity pictured below.)

    Thanks, David

    FEF959FF-BA0F-4929-8967-01221443DADE.jpeg

  9. Did you punch the eye round, then form to oval, then drift? If so I would guess that the eye wall was too cold when formed back to oval. Otherwise, I cannot envision the failure mode, even then it’s oddly symmetrical. Just can’t see how that crack would have form on the inside wall otherwise.

    I guess, if the hole was being stretched and the inside walls cooled by the drift, it could fail in that manner. Very interesting and thinking “out loud”...

    If we can figure out what happened, it may help me avoid failures in the future. (I have a large number of these clip available!)

    David

  10. Today was the IBA state hammer in and there was a great group of smiths there. After the demo was over (fantastic display of power hammer tooling and techniques), I was able to use the host’s 125# Williams and White power hammer to transform 4” of 2” diameter 1045 in to a bolster for hammer eye drifting. (To support the round cheeks at final drifting/refining) I may need to take some material off of the ends, but I have to try if out first.

    David

    BD3FA9CB-CF83-4F1E-8E4C-1F75081190B6.jpeg

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