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I Forge Iron

Gmeads

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  1. We moved the burners off on an angle and this weekend we are going to add a baffle above the front and rear holes to keep exhaust from affecting the burners. Once we get everything insulated and refractory put in I think we are going to be in business
  2. Well I went ahead and just drilled out two more holes at the 45° mark of the tank and did a quick test and I think that's going to be what makes the difference so I've got to plug holes and remount the collars and probably still add a deflector to the front because the front burner still sputtered a bit
  3. What would be your suggestion to proceed then? Am I just going at it the wrong way or is there a specific direction I should go to make this forge work properly? Would I be better adding in a way to funnel in fresh air to the T's?
  4. How do I go about battling back pressure then?
  5. Yeah if I pull it out of the tank them they burner perfectly fine
  6. Ok so they are .75" pipe by 8" long and the T is 1.25"x.75". So what would be your recommendation to try and tune it? Longer pipe? Try a bend?
  7. The pipe is a 1" pipe and I think it's a 2" outside diameter on the open ends. It was a prebuilt set and they burn really really good when they aren't in the forge and just laying on the ground
  8. So I've built a propane tank forge and put in two frosty T burners vertically. During the first tests I'm having issues with the burners burning efficiently and intermidently. Is this because of them just sucking in the heat and fire coming from the exit and entrance? Is it possible for me to put in a 90° and another pipe to make them an L shape to get the tops away from the heat or did I just mess up totally by putting them veritcal
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