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What kind of anvil do I have?


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Had an old farmer up on the mountain GIVE me an anvil and a leg vise 2 days ago. The anvil weighs around 110 pounds.  (I weighed it) it doesn't show many markings except there is what looks to be a 3 on one side and a K on the other. Any advice will help. Thanks. 

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Does it ring?  Are you in the USA?   To me it looks like the knock offs being cast in Mexico using real anvils as the pattern.  They range from being quite good to not very depending on what's in the ladle at the end of the day..

What does the ball bearing test say?  The thin heel is odd as it looks to be a cast anvil and the cast steel anvils often have a thicker heel for strength.

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BF are you basing that on the "raised foundry pattern mark" as the inset triangle with the C in it is definitely not there, (nor with a W either...)

Columbian did use a thin heel and a high grade steel...

And yes columbian is the brand name; though I'd like more proof before accepting it for that anvil.

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2 minutes ago, ThomasPowers said:

BF are you basing that on the "raised foundry pattern mark" as the inset triangle with the C in it is definitely not there, (nor with a W either...)

Columbian did use a thin heel and a high grade steel...

And yes columbian is the brand name; though I'd like more proof before accepting it for that anvil.

As you can see on the pictures, there is a K on one side and a 3 on the other 

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I think that a Columbian was used for the pattern, but the object in question is a knock-off or ASO from another foundry. I have never seen a real Columbian with that much porosity, it never would have been allowed out the door.

 

Here is one from our Boy Scout camp shop. Prominent logo.

Columbian at Camp Grimes1.jpg

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Yes, typical triangle -C logo.

I could post lots of examples of the varying casting quality of Columbians.  Not all were made in Cleveland. And  Soderfors was not the only Swedish company casting Columbians at times.

This one was amazingly far off on the center seam. They ground the face and bottom smooth, out the door it went.

2016-08-17 21.35.05.png

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Before the EPA put them most of them out of business in the 1980's, every large town, and even most large companies, had a foundry as well as a blacksmith  shop. Certainly every railroad repair shop had a foundry.  Starting in the early 1800's, cast iron was widely used for pipes, machinery, toys, and all sorts of things in between.

Like a modern welding and machine shop, some places would do custom orders for the public.  Not a huge problem to get a buddy that worked in a big shop to slip in a personal project at the end of a run.  The problem was never knowing what you were getting in the ladle that day.  Now getting a solid cast steel anvil, or a cast iron anvil with a steel face securely attached, is a different matter.

There are still a few around, like Laurel Machine and Foundry, that occasionally make limited runs of swage blocks, cones, etc. from high grade iron, but they are the exception.

 

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I agree with Black Frog who is very knowledgeable about anvils - Its a columbian. They often used the raised letters on the opposite side of the triangle/C to indicate a weight range. it would be nice if someone compiled a list of those letters and corresponding weights. For example I have a 100lb Columbian with an M on the back side and a 90lb one with IV on the backside. So a K, as on this anvil could indicate a 110lb columbian?

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