March 31, 20242 yr I understand, I lived around a nearly constant work cycle myself. Being a field guy about 3 weeks in 4 and getting to spend the in town week repairing equipment didn't leave me much time for myself that eating and sleeping didn't take up. You know Japanese swordsmiths often use a traditional stake anvil maybe 3-4" square and small charcoal fires for heat. Hammers, chisels, files, stones, etc. Of course but the entire kit fits in a bag and I'm not talking a duffle a small suit case would have enough extra room for your apron and safety gear. Anymore I put more than I'm probably going to use in a plastic bucket. The minimum equipment list is really quite small. Frosty The Lucky.
March 31, 20242 yr I have minimal illusions to what i need. My ideal anvil setup would be a 6-10 inch round S7 or H13 round with enough length to get 100-150 lbs , a stump with a stand alone horn (believe its called a cone mandrel) and finally a mount for a hardy and pritchel hole. (Previously mentioned idea about tie plates as a start)
April 5, 20242 yr Tie plates, Is that the plate the rail sits on and the spikes go through, or the plate that ties two rail sections together?
April 6, 20242 yr As far as I understand it, its the plate that sits on the railroad ties and gets the spikes driven through.
April 6, 20242 yr mnidoone is correct. The plate that fastens rails together end-to-end is called a “fish plate”; these have become less common since the development of thermite welding.
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