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I Forge Iron

Rantalin

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Posts posted by Rantalin

  1. Well, i all for safety. but I guess, i'd prefer things to work the way they are intended should the situation arise where they are needed. So although I'm not going to be marching off to war with my swords (yet!) I may need them for something else.

  2. I AM having a halloween party, and a lot of my friends are sword enthusiests. I trust all of my friends, and have already made up a set of rules involving the weapons. All of them MUST remain sheathed at all times, it the sword needs to be removed from the waist, the sheath comes too. I don't drink, dislike drinking as a way of having fun. I live in the middle of nowhere, where neighbors are not an issue at all.

  3. I spent the summer working for my dad, who owns an electrical contracting company. We were doing some work out in Boston over a standard grid ceiling, over some cubicles on the 7th floor. One of our guys went up into the ceiling to splice in a set of wires, and when he did, he made a very shocking discovery.(Pun intended) Some *idiot* left a set of wires coiled up without any wirenuts or tape to stop the electricity. Our guy checked to see if it was a live wire, which it was. And it was lying only inches away from the metal ceiling grid. If the wire had made contact with the grid, the entire floor's ceiling grid, along with probably most of the 23 floor building, could have become electrified, causing major damage to a lot of equipment, and possibly people also. No one has any idea how long this wire was up there for, and it was pure luck that it didn't cause a problem.

  4. A jig could be made with two pieces of 1/4" X 3/4" stock that are about 3/4" apart welded to a piece of scrap as suggested below, this would account for the 1/2" width of the collar and the 1/8" of the stock on each side. You can then cut a piece of 1" X 1/8" to 2 1/4" and lay it across the jig, with each end flush with the ends of the 1/4" X 3/4". A piece of 1/2" stock is then smacked into the jig, bending each wing up. The wings are then bent over the 1/4" stock on either side and the angles are all trued over the jig. I drew a picture in paint to help explain what I mean.

    jig.jpg

    The hard part would be getting the 1/2" bar to be in the exact center of the 1" X 1/8" bar

  5. I looked at the blueprint for the hairsticks with the rose pattern top today. As I looked at the picture from the top, I had an idea. What if you brought the bottom segment of the rose to a careful welding heat, and welded the bottom of the rose to the stick itself. Or, if welding wouldn't work, or would be too difficult, just bend the bottom section down into the stick. This would make the rose cup a little at the bottom.

  6. what does the inside look like? If it is indeed a puller, it may have a mechanism to allow a wire, or band to be fed from one end, and catch tight if you try to pull it out. The band would need to be cut and the extra piece inside the puller removed.

  7. How efffective is forging with charcoal briquettes? I know its not the best thing to use, and I could make charcoal if necessary, but I was oplanning on doing some forgin on sunday and I have no fuel. I usually buy bags of 100% natural wood charcoal from hardware stores around town, but it seems every place I find that has charcoal never restocks after I buy it all. I don't have the money to order fuel online, as I am a college student and to ship coal to my house would drain all of my money. I am only going to be heating a piece of either flat 1" X 1/8" X 48" or a round bar 1/2" X 48". Thank You

  8. The support is riveted at the base, the top of the support attached seperatly when the entire hanger is riveted onto whatever you are hanging it from. There are two screws, one is in between the support and the base and must be screwed in first to give the drill access to the head of the screw.

  9. After melting my other blade, which was a 6 inch tanto blade, I made this knife for my girlfriend while she was on a trip. The blade is 8 inches long with a 5 1/2 inch handle. All hand made. I used 1/2 inch round bar stock for the blade and I don't know the type of wood. The pins came from nails that I cut and made into rivets. With some practice, I'm sure I can get this looking great. I also laquered the handle to give it some lustre. The blade was ground using a bench grinder, as I have nothing else to use right now. I think it turned out great though.

    100_0238.jpg

    100_0239.jpg

    100_0240.jpg

    UPDATE: I had to rehandle the dagger. The other one had a crack in it. This time, I used a drill press to hollow out the inside of a piece of wood and then jammed the tang of the blade into it. Very snug fit without rivets, pins, screws, or glue. Different style handle also.

  10. My forge is a wash tub with a pipe for an air supply, which is the butt end of a hand held shop vac, which works quite well. So far, I have only tinkered with little projects. I made a decent pair of tongs that I use regularly, replacing the vice grips. Today, I finished making, handling, and grinding a knife; which turned out great for my first one, but still needs work. Pictures of the forge, tongs, and knife will come ASAP, no earlier than sunday night.

  11. Hello again, I am using 100% natural wood charcoal that I found at my local hardware store. It burns great, but I was wondering how fast it should be burning up. I used about 2-3 pounds of it in 1.5-2 hours. I'll admit that my efforts to control the fire to one centralized area were not as good as they could have been, but I just wanted to know what your coal usage per hour is. Thank You all in advance

  12. This isn't a question, so much as an interesting piece of equipment I happened to hear about today. I was getting my car inspected and there was an old anvil on the workbench at the garage. The Mechanic that I was talking to was thinking of taking it to Old Sturbridge Village in MA and taking blacksmithing courses. He is currently a woodworker, turning logs into bowls and such, in addition to working at the garage. He told me about this guy that hooked a 4 speed car transmission up to a lathe and kept one of the ends from turning. He would put a piece of hot metal into the lathe and slowly twist it, then put it into reverse and twist back, creating different twist designs. I thought this was a really nice trick that I would share with everyone.

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