If you are anealing a small enough piece that you could put the rotor over it and let it die out would you go that way or pile on a bit more coal and let it die out on its own. I am asking beacuse I think the rotor is a great idea for ending the session and then it made me wonder would that be a good way to aneal too, but would it cool down too fast? What do you think? I am just thinking I could be anealing pieces ahead of me for future projects nearly every time I shut down. That may not be as much of a concern for eveyone but we are still in extraordinary drought here in western Oklahoma so I have to think about it.
Forge5
in Coal, Solid Fuel
2Posted
If you are anealing a small enough piece that you could put the rotor over it and let it die out would you go that way or pile on a bit more coal and let it die out on its own. I am asking beacuse I think the rotor is a great idea for ending the session and then it made me wonder would that be a good way to aneal too, but would it cool down too fast? What do you think? I am just thinking I could be anealing pieces ahead of me for future projects nearly every time I shut down. That may not be as much of a concern for eveyone but we are still in extraordinary drought here in western Oklahoma so I have to think about it.