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I Forge Iron

Show me your anvil


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30 minutes ago, ThomasPowers said:

If you can forge on it; it's not an ASO, it's an anvil.

ASO is reserved for cast iron things where the face will dent under hot steel being worked!

I have had a couple people message me asking if I could make one in iron or ductile or not hardened at a cheap price, i tell them to keep on walking! 

So on the photo that Koek posted, that is awesome! What would that be made of in the 1800s that would hold up for all these years?

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There are a bunch of early german anvils in mint shape.  Unlike here they had it perfected on the process including a thick face plate 1" thick, usually covering the complete top of the anvil including the horn vs here leaving the horns of simple wrought iron..

A well made anvil used properly will last hundreds of years no problem with very little shown as what we think of as traditional wear sway back and chipping..

 

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6 minutes ago, foundryguy said:

I have had a couple people message me asking if I could make one in iron or ductile or not hardened at a cheap price, i tell them to keep on walking! 

So on the photo that Koek posted, that is awesome! What would that be made of in the 1800s that would hold up for all these years?

Yeah, those are the folk I used to send to Sears for fabbed  railings, etc. I don't do junk either. 

That's a beautiful anvil Koek! She's in perfectly usable condition as she is unless there's a hidden defect somewhere. The little bit of sway won't effect a thing, you forge across the anvil, not lengthwise. She's be wrought iron with a high carbon steel face welded on. The sway is from the wrought iron being malleable under the steel face and over the last century it's dipping a bit. Normal normal. A rebound test, either dropping a bearing ball and estimating how much it bounces back as a %. Or use a small ball pein to tap a pattern on the face and again estimating the rebound. The tone of the ring under the hammer is a good indication, it should be clear and musical metal ring. If you hear a dead tone or it changes ring quickly it's an indication of a problem.

If it's dead across the face the anvil's probably been in a building fire and the face has been annealed. If there are dead spots the weld under the face may be failing locally. OR some moron may have used it for a bench to heat another piece of steel with a torch.

NO GRINDING!!! I'd put her to work immediately. . . Well after I brought her home though I might take her for a test drive.  

Frosty The Lucky.

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Thanks... I'll bring a bearing with me and test it before I decide.  I felt the price was fair, I just was unsure about the depression. I understand that a anvil that age will show wear. Just how much is acceptable is my concern. 

20 minutes ago, JustAnotherViking said:

Where? I can see a small bit of sway, but for a PW, that's virtually nothing. 

That's what I wanted to hear!  Thanks 

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Old English anvils sometimes had the face welded on in segments: I see a horizontal line that may be one of these welds as they often wear differently from the rest of the face (perhaps from decarb of the thinner weld scarf making a slightly softer "line")  Looks to be a good usable anvil and having some sway can be very handy for bladesmithing as it helps in straightening if you are used to it.

Anyone tells you it would be improved by milling or grinding or welding the face flat: Drop the anvil on them!..........beep beep!

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I did have concern with that horizontal line.  I have been researching, and understand not to grind or weld the face.  I would prefer something with character anyway.  I just needed the opinions of folks with experience in these matters.  I can only research so much, but without experience, i have little to base my decision on.  Thank you again everyone.  I hope it is still there tomorrow.

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18 hours ago, foundryguy said:

 What would that be made of in the 1800s that would hold up for all these years?

 

18 hours ago, jlpservicesinc said:

There are a bunch of early german anvils in mint shape.  Unlike here they had it perfected on the process including a thick face plate 1" thick, usually covering the complete top of the anvil including the horn vs here leaving the horns of simple wrought iron..

after fingering the hardy hole I conclude that the face plate is 1,6 thick. 

 

 

 


It may also help the condition, that when I bought her she had been standing in a barn, coated  with half an inch of grease and mud for atleast 25 years.

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Koek,   25 years to an anvil is like time to granite..    I have my primary anvil which I got when I was 16.. It was a 175lbs hay Budden london pattern..   I had been smithing for 8 years when I got it.. I was so excited...  By the time I got it, I had excellent hammer control.. In 15 years of using it daily 8-12hrs a day I put in 2 very small dents in the face.. Tiny, small enough most wouldnt even see them..  

When I pulled myself out of retirement and started smithing again,, I put 6 dents into the face in 6 months from bad hammer control.. I was so disgusted, I went out and bought a brand new anvil.. Of which I don't really care if i dent it or not.. (I do and don't want to dent it but if it does happen, it's brand new.. no harm persay) but with a piece of history like the Hay Budden or any other vintage anvil it bothers me so much so..   

Most forged anvils today are over 100 years old..  There are not a lot of tools or machinery that old still in use everyday that can be in use for another 100 years easily if cared for properly.. 

What is the easiest way to mess up and anvil in use????????   

She is a beauty.. I'm envious... Congrats..   Those German and swedish anvil makers had it really figured out.. Both fit and finish was excellent.. some of the german anvils were monsters and all hand forged..  400-500lbs seems pretty common... Same with Vises..    The industry there for smiths was just far greater for a longer period of time vs in the USA..  Lots of 150lbs anvils or smaller... 200lbs seems to have been the most popular with full time shops and then the 300lbs and up seemed to radiate around industrial forging areas and Rail road shops.. 

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Realized I didn't have pictures of my little rr track anvil that I picked up years ago at the fleamarket for $5. US. It was rusty but a wire wheel cleaned it up nicely. Someone spent a bit of time on it. It currently sits on an old fridge in the shop on Wile E. Coyotes lap ( a larger stuffed version). The guy selling Wile E at the fleamarket didn't have the roadrunner unfortunately. 

 

image.jpg

image.jpg

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My anvil. No idea what make it is or where it originally came from. They had it at my work to bend sheet steel on occasionally but it was in the way and heading for the scrap, so it disappeared one day and turned up in my garden! 

IMG_2395.JPG

IMG_2396.JPG

IMG_2397.JPG

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I almost dont wat to say this but it looks like the edges have been weded up. You can see the distinct lines that run the whole length of the anvil. One way for sure would be an acid etch. It would bring out any weld material. If done properly it shouldnt affect it much. I know you asked him and he told you it wasnt welded but i think he lied.

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Jlblohm I have a pen tablet computer and was able to make the picture pretty large.. It looks to me like it might just be the way it was wire brushed..  The brush being held on the edges longer..   The wear and the marks in the metal run concurrent.. 

I've done acid etching on anvils and it's a neat process to see just where the face is.. It also works on Steel anvils as the hardened areas will show up.. 

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