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Looking for an anvil mount in Portland, Oregon


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Hi there,

I could use a little assistance in finding a round of hardwood to mount my anvil on.  Dimensions around 14 to 16 inches across and 22 to 24 inches tall.  Open to any suggestions.

Thank you!

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Check the "free" section of craigslist.  There is always someone trying to get rid of wood. 

Call tree service guys.  They may even cut a piece to your requested size.  Most likely free, but a box of sweets or beer would probably make you some good friends and future supplier of free wood.  

 

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I've made several stands from Waterbed rails, cut to the proper length and bolted together---standing vertically of course!  Used to be a common scrounge around college campuses in the late spring.  Currently I have 4 stands made from the oak floorboards from a scrapped horse trailer and the bolts used to hold guardrails onto wooden posts. Also utility pole fittings.

anvilstand1.jpg.0cc97ba353d95b4feebb0d9f99647fa2.jpg

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Here's an anvil stand that I built and posted on IFI a while back, but I thought it might be useful to post an updated image of it in this topic with more callouts added. This particular stand will work for small- to medium-size anvils. If I ever get a large anvil, I'd make a larger version of this stand.

anvil-stand-idea.thumb.jpg.bca3b9867f01285292c05aa7ae517856.jpg

Al (Steamboat)

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Picked it up out here in the desert to use for armouring so sheet metal and soft hammers.  Will dent under a hard faced hammer.  (Armouring trick: hard over soft or soft over hard.) The mystery is how it got out here!  No open water large enough for it's use for hundreds of miles...

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No doubt! I worked in El Paso/Jaurez in the mod 90s. Open water is not the first thing that comes to mind. On the way down to Presidio I stopped off to see the "highest natural waterfall" in Texas, down in the Davis Mountains. Sad little trickle, looked as if someone had drug a garden hose up to the top of a desert cliff! Good find on the desert cleat. If I get a chance to bring one home for not much I'll add it to the pile.

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I wondered if it had been used in the mines out here; but the very heavy rust looks like saltwater exposure to me!

I wonder it was a career navy retiree doing one of those "going to go inland until someone asks me "what's that funny looking thing you are carrying?"

The anchor chain out here is understandable: sling it between two dozers and clean scrub from pasture with it.

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