Recent projects
Posted: Wed Jun 29, 2022 4:17 am
Thought I'd share some stuff I've made lately. Can't remember what I've shared and what I haven't. Anyway enjoy.
the more i have used that skinning knife of yours the more I love it. That may be my favorite knife now. And I have a shit load of knives. Prior to that one, I had resolved to using those disposable blade knives with the exacto type blades. Sharp as hell and you just toss and reload when they get dull.
Thanks. I slowed down the grinder and was able to get better pressure on the blades. It also helps to have a year worth of experience under my belt on that grinder now.
is there any money to be made in wrought iron decorative stuff? Like gates and railings, etc? I would think it would be interesting to build those decorative driveway gates. A mexican showed me a trick to laying out the curve along the top of a large driveway gate that I had my mechanics build several years ago. Of course I'm using math to give them all of the lengths of the metal pickets that form the curve, and this guy gets a long 1/2" pvc pipe and has someone hold it at both sides and then lifts it in the middle to form a curve. Which was perfect.
yeah, i knew that wrought iron was the wrong word when I was typing, but that's what everyone calls that style of metal work.Blast wrote: ↑Wed Jun 29, 2022 3:18 pm There is and there are some professional smiths that are set up for that. I'm in my barn so large gates and fencing is out of the question. Also cost is an issue as well. It would cost twice as much, at least, to make the same gate as a commercial operation as you well understand.
As an aside, decorative iron work is referred to as wrought, but wrought iron itself has not been commercially produced in over 50 years. You can see it in older iron that has started to rust and it rusts away in bands, almost looking like wood grain. It is almost pure iron with silica inclusions that when worked form a grain. You have to work it high orange to yellow heat to keep it from splitting. It's these inclusions that helped doom the Titanic, it made the rivets weaker because some of them had a higher silica content.
Don't argue with animal about rivets.Blast wrote: ↑Wed Jun 29, 2022 3:18 pm There is and there are some professional smiths that are set up for that. I'm in my barn so large gates and fencing is out of the question. Also cost is an issue as well. It would cost twice as much, at least, to make the same gate as a commercial operation as you well understand.
As an aside, decorative iron work is referred to as wrought, but wrought iron itself has not been commercially produced in over 50 years. You can see it in older iron that has started to rust and it rusts away in bands, almost looking like wood grain. It is almost pure iron with silica inclusions that when worked form a grain. You have to work it high orange to yellow heat to keep it from splitting. It's these inclusions that helped doom the Titanic, it made the rivets weaker because some of them had a higher silica content.
rule34 wrote: ↑Wed Jun 29, 2022 4:11 pmDon't argue with animal about rivets.Blast wrote: ↑Wed Jun 29, 2022 3:18 pm There is and there are some professional smiths that are set up for that. I'm in my barn so large gates and fencing is out of the question. Also cost is an issue as well. It would cost twice as much, at least, to make the same gate as a commercial operation as you well understand.
As an aside, decorative iron work is referred to as wrought, but wrought iron itself has not been commercially produced in over 50 years. You can see it in older iron that has started to rust and it rusts away in bands, almost looking like wood grain. It is almost pure iron with silica inclusions that when worked form a grain. You have to work it high orange to yellow heat to keep it from splitting. It's these inclusions that helped doom the Titanic, it made the rivets weaker because some of them had a higher silica content.
He might remember this come Thursday.
He'd only remember me if I were a bottle of vodka.disco.moon wrote: ↑Wed Jun 29, 2022 5:02 pmHe might remember this come Thursday.
On a side note I have the stuff you sent me set up in a dollhouse vignette I have set up. It looks really cool.
Glad to hear that it's working well for you.Animal wrote: ↑Wed Jun 29, 2022 2:33 pmthe more i have used that skinning knife of yours the more I love it. That may be my favorite knife now. And I have a shit load of knives. Prior to that one, I had resolved to using those disposable blade knives with the exacto type blades. Sharp as hell and you just toss and reload when they get dull.
But that knife of yours holds an edge for longer than anything I have ever had.
There's a lot to it. Thanks to that show I get asked if someone can make some absurdly complex project in an afternoon. I have one person that is going to be coming for a forge day package that wanted to make a bearded ax. That took me multiple days to forge and finish. I talked him down to a rail spikes tomahawk and matching spike knife.
We used that for the punches and dies on the CNC machines. Lasted longer between sharpening thus extending tool life.DiverTexas wrote: ↑Wed Jun 29, 2022 5:59 pmGlad to hear that it's working well for you.Animal wrote: ↑Wed Jun 29, 2022 2:33 pmthe more i have used that skinning knife of yours the more I love it. That may be my favorite knife now. And I have a shit load of knives. Prior to that one, I had resolved to using those disposable blade knives with the exacto type blades. Sharp as hell and you just toss and reload when they get dull.
But that knife of yours holds an edge for longer than anything I have ever had.
Cryogenically treated steel seems to be the key for longer edge retention.
I am still a little bit confused by that "quinch" process. It seems as if a huge majority of the blades are ruined in that step (warped mostly). I saw one guy one night that was attempting his second quinch and he said to insure success, he was going to heat the oil he quinches it in up to nearly the point that it has to be to work. Which, I assume, is much less of a shock to the red hot steel going into it and is a slower process.Blast wrote: ↑Mon Aug 15, 2022 1:57 amThere's a lot to it. Thanks to that show I get asked if someone can make some absurdly complex project in an afternoon. I have one person that is going to be coming for a forge day package that wanted to make a bearded ax. That took me multiple days to forge and finish. I talked him down to a rail spikes tomahawk and matching spike knife.
That being said I like the knives and the historical blades. I started to learn what I needed to do by watching and researching. Forging the blade doesn't take long, getting it nicely finished takes forever.