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I Forge Iron

john_zxz

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Everything posted by john_zxz

  1. Ok thanks for the answers. I'll have to try them one day...
  2. Great setup you have there and nice luminosity coming from the transparent board.
  3. Hi, I saw these types of forges many time on czech blacksmith's sites and saw that the "clinker breaker" isn't like the ones we have in north america. They have, instead of the clinker breaker, a swirling thing. We can see them on Branco's site: http://www.branco.cz/smith-forges-spare.htm My question is, does it swirl when the air is passing through the pipe or it is only turning with a handle to break the clinkers? And, if it swirls with the air, what is its purpose? No accumulation of clinkers? Creates a better blast on coal? Thanks
  4. http://www.lespac.com/d-outils-materiaux-outils-st-jean-sur-richelieu-divers-LPCaZZ22088153 I found this on lespac.com ... don't know if it is sold or not....worth a call or email at that price. There is also an old powerhacksaw for 45$CND It is located in St-Jean-sur-Richelieu, Quebec, Canada.
  5. I can't find an old bench shear like the Edwards one. The ones that I saw on ebay don't ship to other countries. I tried to find new ones here so I recently found this bench shear on Bosstool at 250$CND. Does anyone know if it is a decent quality tool? I never bought any TJL tool so I don't know if they are good. Specifications: Round Steel: 1.1" (28 MM) Flat Steel: 1.6" x 0.5" (40 x 12 MM) Square Steel: 1 x 1" (24 x 24 MM) Size: 18 x 11 x 17 I guess that the 1" square is cut by turning the piece in the shear to cut it from every side. Also, does a bench shear leaves a "V" cut like when cold cutting steel on anvil with a cold cutter? Thanks
  6. I finaly got time to try the flypress. It works very well and silently. I just made a fuller and it can handle 1 inch bar easily. I'm very impressed. Now it is time to make a lot of dies... Thanks for your comments guys. John_zxz
  7. Oh that's sad he didn't delete the item on the page... Sorry for that.
  8. I found this add on Kijiji. It is located in Jonquiere, Quebec, Canada. Seems to be a very good price if anyone is interested. Around 300 lbs with base for 250$ CND and negotiable... Heres' the link: http://montreal.kijiji.ca/c-acheter-et-vendre-outils-Enclume-environ-300-lbs-W0QQAdIdZ209235749
  9. ok thanks. I'll try it tomorrow.
  10. I just bought the fly press today. The screw was in good condition. The only missing part is the key to lock the wheel but its not a problem to make a new one. It was a bit challenging to unload it from the truck by hand as it weigh around 500 lbs and I was only with my father. Now it sits in my shop on its original base and only need new tooling. Can't wait to work with it. I have a question for you guys. Do I need to bolt the base on the concrete floor or with the weight it'll be okay? There are holes for this in the legs but wanted to be sure if I really need to bolt them down before. I'm scared to try the press without bolting it. I don't want to receive the ball on my head if the whole press swings...
  11. Thanks for the comments. I'll probably see it in person this weekend and if it is in good condition, I'll take it.
  12. Hi, I finally found a screw press that is near my town and wanted to know if it is good enough for what I want to do. The description says: ADAMS SCREW PRESS. TABLE 12 X 7,5". MAX. DIE HEIGHT 5,5". SCREW DIAMETER 2". OVERALL DIMENSIONS 28 X 22 X 64"H. Cast iron table included. The screw seems in good condition. It has big threads on it. It is priced 650 CND $...seems good to me. I know there is a lot in USA that are cheaper but with this one, I can save on shipping. It is only 45 minutes from my home. I want to slit and drift eyes for hammer head (1 1/2" mild steel stock...I forge weld a tool steel face on it). Is it powerful enough to draw a little of the same stock dimension to make a cross peen hammer? I also want to use a screw press to make tenons, slitting and drawing out a 1/2 inch mild steel bar. If it is not enough for the work I want to do, will a #5 Flypress from OldWorldAnvils is better? Thanks John_zXz
  13. Thanks dablacksmith for the shear link. I'll try to get one as it seems to be great for what I want to do. I'll have to find one that is nearer of me or the shipping will be a little high. J.A. I already tried the angle grinder. It works very fine but I want to do a lot of cutting so I'll have to buy a lot of cutting disk. Also I like to work with only mechanical tools. The less electrical tools I use, the best for me. (I'm doing blacksmithing as a hobby so I don't mind with the time thing...) So I guess the solution for me is the shear. Thanks for your help guys. John_zXz
  14. Hi, Does someone know if there is a hand slitting shear good enough to cut a flat bar of 2" x 3/8" (or 2" x 5/16") and 1/2" rod? The metal is mild steel. If there isn't any model that can handle this material, what can I use to cut it without electricity. I don't want to heat the long bar and cut it on my hardy. My shop is too small to move 12' bars around. I tried an electric metal cutting saw but it sucked too much electricity that the breaker jumped. If someone has a solution for me, thanks anyway. John_zXz
  15. Here in Quebec, Canada I use anthracite which is around 10$ CAD for a 40 lbs bag.(I get free 40 lbs bags if they have some holes in it sometimes...they say that they wont sell it like this so take it free:D) I can get 100 lbs of bagged blacksmith coal for around 25$ CAD. Charcoal is 20$ CAD for an 8kg bag.
  16. To John B No I don't have any air regulation or speed controller. When I'm forging I just shut down the fan and restart it when I put metal in fire. It may eat a lot of electricity every time I turn it on... I should put a speed regulation on the fan, but not sure how to do this...I'm not very into electrical things. It is a fan of an industrial heat system that was a gift. I disassembled the heater thing and now it is just a big squirrel cage blower with a motor. I guess I have to know the amps or watts of the motor to choose the right dimmer. Hm...not sure if the label is still there. If I am not able to do this, I'll probably go with the slide valve.
  17. Hi Dickb. I too use anthracite for forging and forge welding since a couple of years. It works great for me even if it doesn't coke up like coal. The anthracite I use is from Keystone company. It comes from mines in Pennsylvania. It is anthracire sold for home heating. It does not smoke but smell a little bit weird. I'm using nut size because pea size tends to fly too easily in the shop and it blocks my air entry too often. To light it up, I use charcoal. I tried wood but it tooks me like 30 minutes to get it hot enough to add anthracite. So I switched to charcoal wich burns hotter. The method I use is to put a ball of paper in the firepot, then I add 2 handfull of charcoal (to cover the paper ball). Then I light the paper and turn the hand crank blower slowly. When the charcoal has turn yellow, then I can add a little of anthracite. Not too much like you can put with coal because the fire will turns down. Then when the anthracite has began to turn orange, I keep adding more and this is the moment where I switch from hand crank blower to electric blower. (The reason is that my electric blower is too powerful for the beginning of the fire. The paper ball would jump in the air if I turn it on too early.)But you can stay with hand crank the whole process. Its just that you have to crank more often than with coal, but you know that already, your using pea size. After that, you keep adding more and more anthracite as the burned anthracite is red hot. You have to do it a couple of time to get used to the "when to add more" thing. My fire is usually 2 to 3 inches over the firepot. By experience, if my fire is too small, the anthracite has tendencies to turns down easily. So I make bigger fire. Oh and you can't add water like coal as it just kills the fire because there is no coking process. It works like a charcoal fire. I made a video on youtube where you can see how I light it. It is a little dark, sorry it was filmed on a photo camera. In the video I use electric blower all the time. I was lucky that the paper stayed in the firepot. Hope it helped you. john_zxz
  18. I see that there are different qualities too in anthracite. I use it for forging and forge welding since 3 years or so. Mine comes from pensylvania and doesn't stink or very very little (a lot less than bituminous). It produces less smoke than charcoal and heat a lot. It is also cheap where I live in Canada. The only disadvantages that I found are: 1- It does more clinkers than bituminous coal 2- If you stop the air, the fire will go down very fast (15 min and you have to light it again) 3- It doesn't coke. It will change aspect from black to grey white but doesn't stick together to form a dome
  19. john_zxz

    anvil euro forgings2

    Here is my latest anvil from Euroforgings before stripping it. It is untouched.
  20. Here is my latest anvil from Euroforgings before stripping it. It is untouched.
  21. john_zxz

    anvil euro forgings

    This is my latest anvil from euroforgings. I removed the paint to see all marks and to finish it. Notice that it has a casting finish and in the cathedral windows, it is very rough. I'll have to grind it a lot.
  22. This is my latest anvil from euroforgings. I removed the paint to see all marks and to finish it. Notice that it has a casting finish and in the cathedral windows, it is very rough. I'll have to grind it a lot.
  23. I use anthracite for forging and forge welding since 2 years. I love it! Its a little bit difficult to light and maintain but it works great when you got the twist. I dont know how you guys get a lot of smoke with it....mine does absolutely no smoke at all. Charcoal does more smoke than my anthracite. Maybe its the quality you use. The anthracite must not have brown color or grey...all black. It is cheaper for me than any other fuel because they sell it at my hardware store near my home. There is a little bit clinkers, I have to clean my fire 1 or 2 times in an afternoon. I light anthracite with 2 handfulls of hardwood charcoal. The air supply I use is a #400 champion blower. It works fine, but if I have some filing to do, I must crank some turns to maintain the fire. I use nut size anthracite beacause I can't find pea size, but I break them to pea size by hand. But it works too if it is nut size...It's just little more difficult to light and maintain. For the ones who wants to try it, use a deep and heavy duty firepot. Mine is the "extra heavy duty coke firebowl" from centaur forge and it works just fine for it. John_zXz
  24. Hi CurlyGeorge! That's a very nice tool. I like the idea of two sides of this tools. With the same tool, you get more different holes. With mine, I only have 5 sizes. I don't know why they put 2 holes side to side the same diameter though?! And UnicornForge, I'll look at pulling wire. It's seems interesting metal to make rivets. Thank's for the info.
  25. Ok, I solve the problem. The problem was that I wanted to upset the rod before putting it in the header. Thats where I failed. When I put it directly in the vise to upset it, the shaft became square. I tried what you said: put the rod (I tried cold) directly in the header, tightened it in the vise and hammered the head with a small ball pein hammer. The result is a nice tiny rivet All I need now is some practice. Thanks to all of your answer. John_zXz
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