I don't do too much hot cutting either. The brazeal hot cut just felt like I had a little more working space, if that makes any sense.
I don't do too much hot cutting either. The brazeal hot cut just felt like I had a little more working space, if that makes any sense.
Mudman, I don't know if you are referring to Brian forging a curve on the hot cut edge or not...
If so, yes, I have made both and the curved edge is the way to go. You can roll your work over the curve, hammering as you go and it makes a much nicer cut than the straight-style edge.
I cheated and made mine from a discarded mason's chisel. The steel is high carbon, already heat treated. I just carefully and slowly ground the straight edge to a curve with a 4 1/2" angle grinder and then polished with a flap disk. Never let the heat get more than slightly hot to the touch. Took a couple of hours overall to let the edge cool each time so as not to mess up the heat treatment. Got lucky too...the handle was a hex cross section, with the 1" width fitting perfectly in my 1" hardy hole.
Love all the tools and interesting ways of using existing tools! I find myself using crescent wrenches often like you show.
12v battery, jumper cables, and a 6013.
I only have a facebook page. https://www.facebook.com/pages/VPT/244788508917829
Great assortment of hammers and tongs you have there. Good for anything you might want to make. I have several of the tongs you have pictured. Aside from the ones I make, I have an assortment of OCT's and Larry's Quick & Dirty's.
I desperately would like to have one of Brian's hammers, about a 3# rounding hammer...similar to the two on the right in your picture.
Thanks! I love all my tools. I'd make my own hammers, but don't have any trust worthy people to strike for me. A powerhammer would be nice. After a close call of someone almost slamming my hand with a 15lbs sledge, and another time missing my head (don't know how people can be this uncoordinated), I decided to stick with having them made for me.
The rounding hammer is my favorite design by far, they all work. But for some reason the Brazeal style hammers work best for me. Weight wise, I've found 2.75 to be an all day weight for my ability. For bigger work I like to use a 3.2lb hammer. Also have a 5lb rounding hammer for fun- it's a bit much. lol
Brian charges a good amount for his hammers, but you can get them a little cheaper from his students. My favorite is Dave Custer of Fiery Furnace Forge. He's made me about 4 hammers.
Another one of my favorites is this cross peen made by Dave Custer. It's a very radiused face, and really narrow peen. Awesome for leaves. Been using this one a lot for leaves.
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Even with the amount of swinging I've done over the years with a 20 lb sledge, I wouldn't want to be striking with much more than a 8lb. Also the way you strike is vastly different than the way most people swing a sledge. Last October I got a lesson in striking when at one of our local blacksmithing club meetings. I got there early and the shop owner asked I'd I'd strike for him since there weren't any others there yet so he could get the project started and be at a more interesting point when everyone started to show up. It felt really awkward at 1st since you have your hands in two places on the sledge, rather than the way most swing a sledge hammer.
From what I understand Israeli trained smiths strike differently though. They wind up with the sledge above their heads, both hands on the end of the handle and hold it there. When told to go, they let fly. There's no changing the tool or stopping the swing vs what can happen striking "traditionally".
Sounds like you need to do a "Striking 101" class for whoever you want to work with. I also wouldn't hand them a sledge that big. I want to get myself a nice 5-8lb sledge with about a 24" handle for striking. That seems to be the size most professional smiths I know use. I'm sure I have an old sledge around here some where that either needs a handle or that I can shorten the handle on.
Here's a pict of me striking at last October's meeting. My hands pretty much stay in the same place all the time.
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No government ever voluntarily reduces itself in size. Government programs, once launched, never disappear. Actually, a government bureau is the nearest thing to eternal life we'll ever see on this earth!
Ronald Reagan
Even if I learned, most people that "might" be able to strike for me just aren't coordinated. I understand what your saying about the weight, but trust me- even if I gave these guys a lighter sledge, it would be the same.
Some day though, I will figure it out. Making hammers and other tools is my ultimate goal with Blacksmithing.
Uri Hofi has a taught a many classes in the US, a friend in NY took a class from him and really liked it.
He was here in NY last year I believe. I was tempted to take the class, but I'd already used up too much time to be able to take off to do so.
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No government ever voluntarily reduces itself in size. Government programs, once launched, never disappear. Actually, a government bureau is the nearest thing to eternal life we'll ever see on this earth!
Ronald Reagan
"USMCPOP" First-born son: KIA Iraq 1/26/05
Syncrowave 250 w/ Coolmate 3
Dialarc 250, Idealarc 250
SP-175 +
Firepower TIG 160S (gave the TA 161 STL to the son)
Lincwelder AC180C (1952)
Victor & Smith O/A torches
Miller spot welder
Regards,
Rob
Great Basin Welding
Blue welders
Red welders
My luscious Table
DIY TIG Torch cooler
Just two photos of a blacksmith shop used long ago and some tools of the trade I found to be beautiful. I've always been fascinated by the tools.
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I believe this was part of re-enactment type village of historical residences down in Louisiana. Sorry about the excessive flash in the 1st photo, the actual area was roped off and it wasn't possible to get in close for better photos.
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MM 211
Smith Tru Lite O/A set, Thanks Bob!
Lincoln AC-225
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But you must not change one thing, one pebble, one grain of sand, until you know what good and evil will follow on that act. The world is in balance, in Equilibrium- Ursula K. Le Guin
Cool set up! My ultimate goal would be to have a shop similar to that.... I have long way to go!
Real welders know how to penetrate!
(Equipment)
Whatever can be used to beat my opponent into submission!
Well, I'm going to call this a forging tool even though I didn't have an operating forge to make it. Started out with some 1" square John Deere drive shaft off some old implement so it's better steel than your garden variety black iron. I've bumped the Hardy in my anvil out to just under 1" so it was ground to fit, and a piece of square tubing and a washer welded on to spread the shock load. It might be cheating, but it's a start...![]()
The harder you fall, the higher you bounce...
250 amp Miller DialArc AC/DC Stick
F-225 amp Forney AC Stick
230 amp Sears AC Stick
Lincoln 180C MIG
Victor Medalist 350 O/A
Cut 50 Plasma
Les
Now it needs some working character, get it dirty for Pete's sake!
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City of L.A. Structural; Manual & Semi-Automatic;"Surely there is a mine for silver, and a place where gold is refined. Iron is taken from the earth, and copper is smelted from ore."
Job 28:1,2
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Danny
Yea...haven't had much time for playing around lately. I got rained out of the field tonite or you wouldn't have got the pic either. Don't worry, my tools get dirty.
The harder you fall, the higher you bounce...
250 amp Miller DialArc AC/DC Stick
F-225 amp Forney AC Stick
230 amp Sears AC Stick
Lincoln 180C MIG
Victor Medalist 350 O/A
Cut 50 Plasma
Les
baron, that would qualify as a hot cut hardy, albeit a bit tall. Might wobble on you cutting thick steel. Good application of scrap iron. No need to heat treat it; it's plenty hard to cut hot steel with and hot steel would remove any tempering anyway.
I would offer one suggestion: get some paint remover and take off the paint on your working surfaces; the horn and table. The face is fine (good looking anvil, BTW). You'll have a mess of sticky, burnt paint when you try to work your hot stock on them.
I'd agree it look good but a bit tall. You can always cut it down if you find it awkward to use at that height.
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No government ever voluntarily reduces itself in size. Government programs, once launched, never disappear. Actually, a government bureau is the nearest thing to eternal life we'll ever see on this earth!
Ronald Reagan
yea...version one is seldom the final cut. No wobble in the anvil, it's a tight fit... but my upright rail anvil is still in the works with a full 1" hardy on the side, and that one is a little looser. Got a couple more chunks of scrap iron I'm eyeing up the next time it rains... I keep thinking back to that guillotine on page 1 and how it could be adapted to a cable crimping tool.
Last edited by whtbaron; 05-02-2015 at 01:24 AM.
The harder you fall, the higher you bounce...
250 amp Miller DialArc AC/DC Stick
F-225 amp Forney AC Stick
230 amp Sears AC Stick
Lincoln 180C MIG
Victor Medalist 350 O/A
Cut 50 Plasma
Les
Wow...that is so cool. And yes...I agree with you about not realizing what was right in front of you and not taking advantage of the knowledge to be offered there.
I look back now and regret not learning more about machinist work when my cousin and uncle had a machine shop. All I wanted to do was fix cars.....turn wrenches. It kills me when I think about it.
Anyway...now its 35 years later and I just purchase my first lathe...An Atlas 618. Yea...I know, its a joke. But, it is what it is.
And yes...Those are some cool blacksmithing tools. A lot of skill there.
My dream is also to make tools. I did make my hardy hot cut out of a broken tractor spindle. It took a lot of work to get a straight edge. I have another spindle I will let the edge curve on the next one. I also have a 1 3/4" shaft from the steering box on an old tractor. It has a 3" keyway on one end and a threaded hole on the other. I can get 13" of clear shaft to work with. I'm hoping it will become a hammer some day. I'm open to other ideas. I sure want to learn more about steel hardness and what works for what. I have yet to use a good rounding hammer. Can't wait to try one.
Not quite finished this, but figured I'd go ahead and post it up anyways. Worked on the hardy block I've been meaning to build. It's a chunk of 4x4 square tube 3/16" wall on a piece of 6" square plate I picked up from the tech school last year that I thought would make a good base for this. Top of the block is a piece of 3/4" plate I cut to match the square tube and then drilled out and filed to almost a 1" square hardy hole to match my smaller anvil. I then heated the block and tried to drift it out the rest of the way to 1". I probably could have left it a bit smaller before I drifted as once hot, the plate expanded to the point that the drift would drop thru. I had to wait until it was almost back to a black heat before it shrank enough the drift had any resistance.
I still have to bevel the tube and weld it to the top plate, and drill the lower plate for mounting holes and a center hole in the base so if something gets stuck, you can drive it out from the back. I haven't decided if I'll grind the corners of the top plate to match the rounded corners on the tube, or leave them square.
For those wanting to make their own hardy tools, but are afraid sledging on their anvil might break the heel, or for those with RR track anvils with no hardy hole, this is an easy solution. I'll probably mount this on it's own stump and use it to hold hardy tooling like my hot cut that I want handy, but that I don't want to leave in the anvil.
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No government ever voluntarily reduces itself in size. Government programs, once launched, never disappear. Actually, a government bureau is the nearest thing to eternal life we'll ever see on this earth!
Ronald Reagan
That's a nice job fabbing up that hardy block. As you said, that should really appeal to the folks with anvils without hardy holes. Portable too. I bet it was fun drilling out and... particularly filing the hole! That's some thick steel.
That's pretty sweet, I like it. I was thinking along a similar train of thought, but maybe I'm not looking at a thick enough piece of metal. I was going to use a railroad fishplate with some 1" inside dia. sq tubing welded below it for stability, with the whole thing set into an oak stump... similar idea to the stake plate but made for Hardy tools. I cursed taking my anvil's Hardy from 7/8 out to 1"...can't imagine making that one was much fun.
The harder you fall, the higher you bounce...
250 amp Miller DialArc AC/DC Stick
F-225 amp Forney AC Stick
230 amp Sears AC Stick
Lincoln 180C MIG
Victor Medalist 350 O/A
Cut 50 Plasma
Les
That would work as well if you don't have any heavy plate. You may need some solid vertical blocking around the hole though. I've seen it done that way as well. Usually something like 4 pieces of 1" solid wrapped around a 1" bar with a bit of thin sheet as a spacer to help with shrinkage when you weld up the bars into a cross shape below the plate.
Originally I was just going to drill the center to 7/8" or 1" depending on the biggest bit I had and drift the round hole square by heating it in my forge and sledging the drift thru it. When I put in the vise on my drill press, I decided to start by drilling out the corners 1st, and just went on drilling from there until I had most of the material removed. Then I simply took a nice sharp course double cut file to it. I probably could have just finished the work with the file if I really wanted to vs drifting it because I was pretty close at the end. I may try to drift the next one to size. I have the parts to make a 2nd one and I may make one to match the 1 1/4" hardy on my bigger anvil, though I do have a swage block now I could work on if I wanted to make up more hardy tools for that. I may just drift a 2nd 1" one just to show it can be done at some point, we'll see.
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No government ever voluntarily reduces itself in size. Government programs, once launched, never disappear. Actually, a government bureau is the nearest thing to eternal life we'll ever see on this earth!
Ronald Reagan