Jump to content
I Forge Iron

Chris C

Members
  • Posts

    2,136
  • Joined

Posts posted by Chris C

  1.  

    "Do you have a 3x5 card filled out to post if they have a bulletin board?  (With a phone number tear strip along the bottom.)"

    Well, Thomas, I don't know about a  "tear strip at the bottom", but I'll stop and pick up some 3x5 cards along the way.  Makes sense.

    Well, the "cool-air man" got our system running well enough to get it to run on manual all night. We set it to "freeze" just in case it wouldn't come back on after it hit that temp. (which is what he recommended).  We'll have to nurse it along until Monday when he can come back to fix it.  He would work through the weekend, but our unit needs a new "brain" and he can't get it until Monday morning.

    Yes, I remember the wet towels years.  We were fortunate.  My Dad was a mechanical genius and he "home-built" the first air-conditioner anyone had in our neighborhood.  He also installed ducting to distribute it throughout the house.  Never have figured out how he knew to do what he did to build it.  Every time I asked "how", he just said "it was easy..........I just did it."  Like I said, he was a mechanical genius.  While he was able to provide his family with a cool home in the 50's, he couldn't do that with our car..........................so when we traveled to Red River, NM for our vacations every August, we traveled at night, covered in wet towels and ran with the windows down so we'd be cool.  We'd leave in the evening and arrive in the morning.  Dad would drive all night.  Those were the good 'ol days.............or at least that's how we think of them today.

  2. Well, we are still fighting air-conditioner problems (technician is here as I type) but I'm hoping he'll finish tonight and I can make the trip to the Co-op tomorrow morning.  If he doesn't finish tonight and we are without air-conditioning another night, then I won't be able to make the trip.  I'd sure like to start getting the word out I'm "seeking".  An anvil and a post vise are both things I would like to have.  Do I have to have them?  Nope!  I can get by with what I have, but as you say, Thomas, if people don't know I'm looking, no-one will know I'm looking.............or something like that.:wacko: :blink:

  3. I tend to agree with Jim, but..................................pricing them by the pound based on the area in which they are being offered is a good way to be able to figure a starting price on the items.    When I purchase anything, I base my willingness to pay the price, not the weight of the item.  Anvils are the only thing I know of (other than food, on the hoof, in the ground or in stores) sold by the pound.  Strange situation, but, in a way, I think it works well.  Let's face it, in the end it's up to the buyer whether or not they are willing to part with the funds.

  4. I spent 27 years as a professional photographer..................backpacking in the high country of CO, NM, and WY, so I know how wonderful it is at high elevation.  Unfortunately, my little wife can't tolerate the cold up there...........except at night.  I can't take her there at night and bring her back down to the warmth in the morning.  She's pretty hard to please when it comes to temperatures.  I'd trade her in, but she's the last one I care to try and train.  :D

  5. It only reached 90 here yesterday for the first time this year.  Supposed to be hotter'n dat late this afternoon.  Our air-conditioning unit quit working in the early evening yesterday.  I'm sitting here waiting for the repairman to come.  Little wife and I can't sleep if it's hotter than 68 degrees at night, so didn't get much sleep last night.  Don't know what we're going to do when the Chi-Comms hit our energy grids.  Talk about a couple of spoiled brats!  ;)

  6. DHarris,

    We've got a guy in our Thursday night group who came in Second on FIF. They've even invited him back to participate in a competition from the past Champions and Second Place holders.  Nice guy.  Sure knows how to make Forge Welded steels.  Nice looking patterns, too.  You ought to drive up and join us.   Tonight there were only 3 of us at the forges.  Not crowded.

  7. As I said in my last post, I apologize for having missed that you'd done that.  I didn't read your post thoroughly, and you didn't read mine thoroughly. :D  I feel better now that I'm not the only one who reads too fast sometimes.  :lol::D;)  And as I also implied, I'm envious of your new, very usable, anvil.  Hammer away, my friend...............let it ring.

  8. I'm sure you are excited about your first anvil, Larry.  I know, if I could find one I wanted, I would be as excited.  There is a lot of collective knowledge on this forum and typically it's shared in a more civil way than most forums.    The only negative comments I've seen here is from people trying to share based on the mistakes they or someone they know has made.  And that is only a perceived negativity.   It's always considered a serious "no-no" to grind the top surface or edges of an anvil.  But if you bought an anvil before learning that....................well, how could you know?  Maybe the grinding was just the seller's way of smoothing up a few dings. 

    "Thickness" has little or nothing to do with why grinding is so lowly thought of.  The hardened surface can easily be ground away.  But there is a way to find out if you have a usable surface.  Get yourself a 1" ball bearing.  Drop that ball bearing from a height of 12" onto the surface of the anvil.  I'm told if it rebounds more than 60% of the height from which it was dropped, you have, at least, a usable anvil.     If it's like 30% you'll know why grinding is considered so bad.

    Hope this helps.............and welcome to the forum.

×
×
  • Create New...