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I Forge Iron

John NC

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Posts posted by John NC

  1. I've got to make some lightweight chain, and I've got some annealed steel wire that's just the right diameter that sure would be easy to make links out of, cold.

    Can I make up the chain, then harden it? I'm thinking something like "Heat to XYZ degrees then quickly quench in PDQ."

    TIA

  2. I have seen people drill a hole at the junction before forging, never seen a punched hole there but it's certainly possible.

    I just file the area a little so it looks nice. I don't mind seeing evidence of the hot cut.

  3. My gas forge is about eight inches across, which is a bit of a limitation. But, when life hands you lemons, you should make lemonade, right?

    Made a 7 1/2" bowl, then added 'leaves' or 'petals' to it to get it up to a decent size. It's about 12" in diameter.

    bigbowlSM.jpg

    I started a more elaborate version along the same lines today. Pics next week.

    Your opinion please, Should I have used more rivets? 3? 5?

  4. Ok folk, here's what I came up with based on an amalgam of your ideas.

    Introducing the Super Tri-Star 3000! (R.I.P. Billy Mays)

    First, draw an equilateral triangle on half a manilla folder (thin flexible plastic would be more durable, but I couldn't find any around the house), then bisect the sides.

    Then, cut out the star shape, punch a hole in the center, and every 1/2 inch down each leg.

    To use, apply to bowl with magnets or masking tape. Choose the holes you want to use to mount your legs and mark.


    Bada bing, you're done.
    Thanks again, all.

    15322.attach

    15323.attach

    15324.attach

  5. Lots of very good ideas here. Thanks all!
    Considering the un-uniformity of my bowls I'll have to try a few of these to see which ones work best in which situations.

    Mike, I love flexible plastic rulers. I have one right here in my desk, one downstairs in my wood shop and one at the shop. Couldn't do without 'em. And the bend-a-facsimile-out-of-wire trick was one of the first things I learned when I started smithing!

    Thanks again, all.

  6. I searched the forum, got nothing, Googled, got nada again. Let me ask y'all here: Is there an easy way to lay out the triangular pattern (spacing of the legs) of a tripod?

    I'm working on three legged bowls and am having trouble getting the 120 degree dimension between adjacent legs even. What I'm looking for is a quick way to draw an equilateral (equiangular?) Y on the bottom of the bowl. Some sort of stiff-yet-flexible template maybe? :confused:

    Thanks in advance,
    John

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