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I Forge Iron

Stump anvil hardie hole?


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So I'm getting an anvil made for me. I decided to go with a traditional late viking setup, something like the picture. I'm mostly planning on doing small jewelry and knives, so that should work, right? I mean I figured that people had been using that type of set up for like 1,000 years, I'm sure I can get by...

 

Anyway my question is, what do I do about a hardie hole in a set up like this? Should I try and make a metal square and bury it into the stump and put hardie tools in that? Anyone have any ideas?

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Grader blade like from an ice scraper or something like that? I live in Texas so that might be a bit difficult to find, but I'll keep an eye out. You think just any metal I can bend in that shape would be OK?

 

I've been looking for rail road track lately but no luck so far, I need to keep hitting the scrap yards I guess. I still don't have my anvil in or my forge built, but I've been getting stuff ready here and there. 

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Find a used corner bit from a D-8  the hole will be 1"  sq and the cutting edge will be 1 1/4 thick.  Most grader blades are 3/4 thick and take a 5/8" bolt.  So it works out to a 3/4" sq hole for the plow bolt.  The D-8 corner bit could be stood on edge and make a decent anvil as well.   I used a piece to make a small bick.  It hardened nicely in water.

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Hi venusblue.

Last month, for a 'mediaeval faire', I made a similar set up to your picture.  

For the square-hole-in-a-stump, I drilled a 1 inch hole with a spade bit to the depth of my hardie shank.  Then chiselled the corners out to approximately 1" square. The rough square hole deliberately let just the tip of the shank in.

Next I heated the shank, and hammered it into the hole- not quite bottoming out. Douse with water.

This gives a matched fit and also allows the tool to sink tighter with use.

Hope that was what you were after,

Regards,

Andrew.

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My suggestion, and I'm not trying be cute here, is to learn to do most things with the hammer. I use a very similar setup. I can no longer move my anvil around thanks arthritis. I use an anvil devil or a hot cut chisel to cut when needed. I use to miss using bottom tooling, but now I don't. Some folks are quite surprised at what can be done with an anvil smaller than my fist and a one pound hammer.

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Those are some pretty good ideas, too. I could probably just grab some angle iron and make fullers out of that, or make something myself. Hmmm really good ideas. All I could see myself using is a chisel type hardy tool, something that I could use an anvil devil for instead actually. I agree too, Donnie, I do need to just start hammering. I'm a bit frustrated because my anvil won't be built until sometime around december, and I think I'm getting a bit too much ahead of myself. I don't want to go out and blow my money on things I won't use, I think I'd be better doing it and buying/building things as needed. I think a socket that fits over my anvil is a good idea, or maybe I can find something in the right general shape and make something like a second stake to use for that, so I can quickly and safely transfer my work between it and the anvil. 

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Honestly if your going to do that, instead of a second stake, i would go back to your ariginal idea, a peice of 1 1/2 heavy wall square tubing set in the stump as a hardy hole. I still suggest sholdering it with a peice of 1/2 square bar. That would give you a hardy hole, that you could hide with the tool. If your tools, or anvil are taperd, you can use them to drift the tubing for a tigter fit. This would alow you to knock down your entire set up, and still have the look. In the mean time you might try sorcing a 1-2" bolt. That will give you an anvil, once the grade stamp is grount off

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That's also a really good idea, about the bolt. I'm going to check some of the supply houses for work to see if I can get it for a discount. I've been working a lot of construction lately, I'm sure I can find some old ones laying around in scrap piles. Hmmm I'm going to try and source a nice big bolt tomorrow then. Next I just have to cut up the fallen tree in my back yard for the stump, and get some fire clay for the sink sitting next to the tree...

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