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I Forge Iron

Ridgeway Forge Studio

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Posts posted by Ridgeway Forge Studio

  1. When I got started Blacksmithing, before even acquiring an anvil, I bought a champion 400 whirlwind firepot and blower - and I think I may finally be putting them in retirement, some 112 years after their production. 

    My firepot has gotten extremely thin and cracked over the years, due to rust and use. I would like to know what the thickness of a firepot should be, at least originally. 
     

    IMG_4288.thumb.jpeg.3fa0a80e45185d724c6322a7e84ec7d2.jpeg

     

    IMG_4286.thumb.jpeg.1f3efb556af34ea1f1d7f402a50f261c.jpeg

  2. JHCC: You're more right than I am. I have a tendency to overbuild everything: see my previous picture post in this thread on my own stand for my H frame press. I should have built it out of plywood, but I had a bunch of old 2x4's from a chicken coop that I cut and make into almost a board and batten. The whole thing looks like an old shipping crate. 

    Tommy, even if not necessary, I can see a small grate welded under for hot metal to be a potentially useful tool. I wouldn't really know for sure, though - all of my anvil stands are stumps. 

     

    Billy - can I 'borrow' that idea? I love the way it came out and how it looks. 

  3. Rusty, crusty and pitted- I’ve had this anvil since I bought it from the antique mall 8 months ago, finally mounting it.

     

    it is 180 lbs (approx) and seems to be in good shape other than the rust and pitting.

     

    is it a Hay Budden or a Trenton? Any marking has long since disappeared…

     

    IMG_4281.thumb.jpeg.e1be22045ef713427034375d0e075e7d.jpeg

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    IMG_4283.thumb.jpeg.95980fdf9bc0f3d57df99ad0e81da851.jpeg

  4. Welding is easy once you forget it’s hard. 
     

    I tend to do sloppy, dirty welds- I rarely scarf or upset, I get it too hot, I don’t flux- and sometimes it doesn’t work. But I suppose it all goes to show that there is a spectrum of “right” ways to weld. Smarter blacksmiths than me have failed with more precise parameters.

    have fun with welding

  5. I mostly use the horn of my anvils as fullers and to true up bottle openers. It allows me to hit the ring at an angle and leave a pretty chunky amount of hammer marks on both the inside and outside of the ring. The only other thing I can think of I've done with a horn in the last few years is weld 12-14" rings on it. Work well for that, before taking that ring to the floor cone. 

    Scrolls, finials, hooks, curves I all do at the edge of the anvil. 

  6. I know its been some time, but I have some contributions. 

     

    If you find good blacksmithing coal (burns hot, clean and welds nicely), buy as much as you can. There is no saying if you will ever find it again. 

     

    Wipe your tools down with oil when the weather changes, unless you are in the desert. The changing temperatures can cause flash rust on big heat-sinks like anvils. Oil helps. (or wax or whatnot)

     

    Slack tub water works for poison ivy. This in no way guarantees that it will not cause an infection since it is dirty water. 

     

    When you need nuts and bolts for a project, buy one extra. It saves a trip. 

     

    Learn when your body wants to sit down, lie down, drink water, drink gatorade, go inside etc. Most injuries occur because you did not listen to your body's cry for mercy. Don't ruin a piece because you refuse to take a break. 

     

    Eye protection. Everyone, every time. 

  7. 18 minutes ago, Scott NC said:

      Does it work on yellow jackets?  I'm allergic.

    I have a suspicion that the caffeine  will only make them sentient.... 

    Have you tried an atom bomb or perhaps death laser? 

     

    In all seriousness, I have never tried, because yellow jackets are God's curse for man's hubris. I hate them so much. They nest in our ground next to the septic tank and cause me royal grief when I try to weedwhack. 

    Perhaps someone with a entomological bent will try it and get back to us? 

  8. It is the time of the year in Maryland where the wood bees and mosquitos come out and love to harass innocent blacksmiths- but I have a solution!

     

    go to the store, buy a bag of espresso ground coffee, add some to a dish (it will get very stained, so a metal dish or ceramic dish you don’t care about) and light it on fire like incense.

     

    the smell is bearable, but bugs hate it. It can clear out a 20x20 shop easy, and it burns steadily depending on how much you have.IMG_4259.thumb.jpeg.266cbcb80f2bd37c8e84df5aa7ceacc0.jpeg

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