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I Forge Iron

It followed me home


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Well Saturday Dec 30 I stopped at my favorite scrapyard, it's about 8 miles from my shop, the owner smiled and told me he was saving something for me and took me out to the pile and showed me a 50# Vulcan anvil in fair using condition. I said I'd buy it how much?  US$20 then while I was hunting the piles a fellow drove up and started throwing steel out of his pickup.  I pointed out to him that he was throwing out a set of showing tongs---alligators--- and he said they weren't any good anymore; so I grabbed them.  The bitts were soft and I filed down the aggressive teeth on them and they work a treat for bladesmithing holding stock a bit smaller than my 1/4" holding short bitted shoeing tongs I use for holding tangs.  The scrapyard owner gave them to me as a Holiday present...so in return I bought a piece of 5/8" plate with a hole blown through it from the explosives test site near by.

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From our weekly foray to the trash compactor.

Some cable for Damascus billets, assorted pieces of plate and 3 shaft's 1 1/2 inch in diameter 11 inches long with some type of cam on one end, probably make good anvil tools.

From a local junk shop a 42 inch in diameter by 3 inch wide wagon rim (probably wrought iron) weighs 45 pounds that cost ten dollars U.S. and 2 files and a large box wrench. .

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Hi Irondragon,

those 3 shafts with cams are air brake s cams the cams are what actually spread the brake shoes apart. Probably off a semi or end dump. I've dragged a few home after replacing them but never made anything from them should be good stock for some project.

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Out this away I'm running about 9 wrought to 1 mild steel.  I'm probably high grading as the newer mild steel ones are more often still associated with the wagon wheel and so are not in the scrap stream yet.  I do find WI stuff that was made from wagon tire as it was a common scrap material at one time. The cross section is distinctive...

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These didn't quite follow me home but they were waiting at the gate to greet me. My son works as a fitter/turner in Townsville and he dropped these ball bearings off this morning. He repairs big industrial pumps and keeps these for me.

They make good eyes for junk sculptures, but I have yet to find a good use for them in blacksmith work. I'm guessing the metal is high carbon. Any ideas?

The golf ball is there for size comparison.

 

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