Chris Waldon Posted April 15, 2010 Posted April 15, 2010 Two days ago I bought a 1886 Fisher anvil that ways about 60lbs on eBay. I paid $29 for it. (Plus $52 for shipping) Is this the deal of a lifetime, or does this kind of deal occur regularly? I would post pictures, but it hasn't arrived and I can't get back to the ebay page. Quote
ThomasPowers Posted April 15, 2010 Posted April 15, 2010 Don't know about others but that's the sort of deal I look for; I used to average 1 per year under a dollar a pound when I lived in OH. Yours works out to $1.35 a pound; not bad at all these days if it's in good condition---a definite bragging anvil! My best was a mint condition 515# Fisher for $350 or about 68 cents a pound. Not an e-bay find so no shipping cost. Just bought a 110# Peter Wright in very good condition at $1.33 a pound, (local craigslist so no shipping). First anvil I've bought since I moved out here though I've been given 1 and found 1 a friend got for free. (Also; one of my students found out that his grandmother had 2 anvils buried in the scrap metal on her city lot. His Uncle took the larger one and he got a 138# Peter Wright. A friend in the southern part of the state was given a 750# West anvil recently...) They are out there if you are willing to hunt for them! Was it mislabeled on e-bay to go so cheap? The smaller ones often go for more than the behemoths! Quote
pkrankow Posted April 15, 2010 Posted April 15, 2010 $81 delivered to the door for a 60# anvil, hopefully in good condition...not too bad. Never seen an anvil go for a mere $29 on Ebay. Phil Quote
Chris Waldon Posted April 16, 2010 Author Posted April 16, 2010 It was labeled as "1886 # 6 Fisher Anvil" and it might have had "antique" in there as well. The reason it went for so little is that I'm an eBay shark that bids in the last 8 seconds to prevent other buyers from countering. It's far from mint condition, but I'm sure I'll be able to use it. It sure beats my old 20lb one. What do you reckon it will be made from? Did Fisher make all their anvils out of wrought iron? Cast? Steel? Quote
Mark Wargo New2bs Posted April 16, 2010 Posted April 16, 2010 If I have my history correct, the founder of Fisher accidentally discovered the process of welding steel to cast iron in a factory fire. He founded the Fisher Norris Anvil company to create cast iron bodied anvils with steel faces solidly welded on. Mark Quote
Dragons lair Posted April 17, 2010 Posted April 17, 2010 It was labeled as "1886 # 6 Fisher Anvil" and it might have had "antique" in there as well. The reason it went for so little is that I'm an eBay shark that bids in the last 8 seconds to prevent other buyers from countering. It's far from mint condition, but I'm sure I'll be able to use it. It sure beats my old 20lb one. What do you reckon it will be made from? Did Fisher make all their anvils out of wrought iron? Cast? Steel? Hey Chris, Don't think 8secs will always work. Have been out bid at the last sec more times than I care to remember. Hope ya got a good one. Found one at the flea mkt same size for $30. It is nice enough for trade stock. Ken. Quote
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