Retirement Projects

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Replies

  • RodaRose
    RodaRose Posts: 9,562 Member
    Amazing because it's so beautiful and functional. She will take good care of you.
  • klkarlen
    klkarlen Posts: 4,366 Member
    d_thomas02 wrote: »
    Just received some glamor shots of my repaired 1907 anvil. (Still trying to arrange return shipping.)

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    (The numbers in yellow on the side are from the worn out forklift tine repurposed as the new face.)

    Here are some side-by-side (more or less) of before and after.

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    She started life at 125 lbs. She was down to 120.6 lbs after 111 years, losing a third of her face more than 40 years ago. And now, with a new face and upsetting block, she weighs in at 157 lbs.

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    (The superimposed T and E are the maker's mark of the gentleman who did the repair work.)

    Guessing she'll be good to go for another couple of hundred years now.

    Should we be looking for you in future episodes of Forged In Fire?
  • d_thomas02
    d_thomas02 Posts: 9,055 Member
    LOL. Not likely. I've no where near the experience nor skill to make that happen. Also camera shy.

    Just having fun with a new hobby.
  • d_thomas02
    d_thomas02 Posts: 9,055 Member
    Picked up my anvil today.

    The gentleman who did the repair has family in my area and offered to bring it to me if I'd cover his gas (roughly half of what shipping would have been). I said "Heck, yeah!" and got to shake his hand.
  • UncleMac
    UncleMac Posts: 13,684 Member
    d_thomas02 wrote: »
    Picked up my anvil today.

    The gentleman who did the repair has family in my area and offered to bring it to me if I'd cover his gas (roughly half of what shipping would have been). I said "Heck, yeah!" and got to shake his hand.

    I'm betting his hand was thick & hardened from the work. :)
  • RodaRose
    RodaRose Posts: 9,562 Member
    Getting a lot done!
  • d_thomas02
    d_thomas02 Posts: 9,055 Member
    Didn't get the smoke box mounted nor any wiring done in the smithy.

    Work has been keeping me too busy.
  • UncleMac
    UncleMac Posts: 13,684 Member
    d_thomas02 wrote: »
    Didn't get the smoke box mounted nor any wiring done in the smithy.

    Work has been keeping me too busy.

    Damn work is always interfering with the better things in life...
  • Farback
    Farback Posts: 1,088 Member
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    After a couple years of daily use, I’m re-finishing the top of the fire department ‘Liars Table’. Stripping it down to the bare wood and replacing the crest. Going to take several evenings. There’s five layers of finish.
  • Farback
    Farback Posts: 1,088 Member
    edited April 2018
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    Ten hours of scraping and sanding to remove five layers of the old finish and get a good surface, one coat of stain applied. Epoxy coats next followed by spar varnish.
  • UncleMac
    UncleMac Posts: 13,684 Member
    It doesn't seem like it's that long since you built that. Hard to imagine it needs fixing already. Man, you firefighters are some kinda rough on the equipment!!
  • Farback
    Farback Posts: 1,088 Member
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    Base coat of epoxy on yesterday, sanded today, applied crest and second epoxy coat over top.
  • d_thomas02
    d_thomas02 Posts: 9,055 Member
    edited April 2018
    Had to work Saturday, mostly PM equipment. Got home at a reasonable hour for a change.

    Son was home when I got there so we fired up the forge and hit some red hot steel. Just playing around with straightening pieces of coil spring that will become punches, drifts, fullers, and chisels. Also played with the hot cut hardy tool, cutting a piece of scrap just to get a feel for it. Shut it down near dark. (Still not wired for lights.)

    Good times.

    (Sorry, no pics.)
  • Farback
    Farback Posts: 1,088 Member
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    A fresh coat of spar varnish to cover up last year’s “rendezvous avec rocks” as the voyagers used to say.
  • Farback
    Farback Posts: 1,088 Member
    The new nuclear oven arrived today! I get my deliveries at the firehall since there’s always someone there most weekdays. Wrestled the box into the car, then into the house. These damn under-counter things weigh around 50 pounds. Removed the old one, which had stopped working years ago and only served as a fan and clock. Hauled that to the basement with only one set of barked up knuckles in the process. Had to adapt things to fit the new one which was 1/2 inch difference vertically. Drilled new mounts, muscled it into place, cleaned everything up then nuked a nice cup of bone broth.

    I’ll say nothing when herself gets home and see how long it takes her to notice.

  • UncleMac
    UncleMac Posts: 13,684 Member
    Farback wrote: »
    I’ll say nothing when herself gets home and see how long it takes her to notice.
    Did she notice?
  • Farback
    Farback Posts: 1,088 Member
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    Today’s project. This will hold an old cast iron double sink for my daughter’s garden.
  • UncleMac
    UncleMac Posts: 13,684 Member
    Since I'm not yet retired, I suppose my efforts don't really count... I'm not as much of a wizard of the woodwork as Farback so I bought a kit chair, spent a few hours sanding away some of the imperfections, then stained/sealed it... assembled, light sanding and final coat...

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  • d_thomas02
    d_thomas02 Posts: 9,055 Member
    edited May 2018
    Long holiday weekend (still worked til 5 on Saturday and going in to mow some commercial clients this Monday morning) so got some work done on the smithy.

    Lights are on. Still running off a long extension cord buried in the grass, but the smithy is wired properly.

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    Also note the old furnace blower in the back window with old grill hood bring in cool outside air and the hood (12" galvanized duct elbow) over the forge is installed through side window.

    Still have some work to do on the outside.

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    Like figuring out how to mount the smoke box.

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    And then install 10' of flue pipe and a rain cap [crosses fingers] soon. (My son holding smoke box for pic.)
  • d_thomas02
    d_thomas02 Posts: 9,055 Member
    edited June 2018
    Another small step towards blacksmithing in all weather.

    Smoke box is mounted. First section of flue pipe added temporarily just for kicks. Threw some burning paper into the hood and it started to draw properly. B)

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  • d_thomas02
    d_thomas02 Posts: 9,055 Member
    A little Father's Day present for myself (OK, my son helped too).

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    Now we'll have to see if she survives the first big wind.
  • d_thomas02
    d_thomas02 Posts: 9,055 Member
    Couple of summer storms have past and flue is still standing. B)

    Managed to get out and start a fire in the forge this morning using feed corn, a renewable "green earth" fuel (rather than fossil fuel coal) and knocked out this blacksmith knife with my son. He then did the grinding on an old Craftman belt/disk sander.

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    Not bad as a first attempt at a knife shaped object.
  • chamblisk
    chamblisk Posts: 296 Member
    Farback, you are amazing. You haven't been working on the kayak in this retirement project feed, but I certainly thought of you when I saw this shirt:
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  • d_thomas02
    d_thomas02 Posts: 9,055 Member
    edited July 2018
    Question for the group.

    Having seen a few of the items I've forged, would you be more likely to buy one if it was forged using a renewable 'green earth fuel' like corn as apposed to fossil fuels like coal and propane, or a deforresting fuel like charcoal?

    Is 'Green Earth Fuel' a selling point or not?
  • UncleMac
    UncleMac Posts: 13,684 Member
    d_thomas02 wrote: »
    Question for the group.

    Having seen a few of the items I've forged, would you be more likely to buy one if it was forged using a renewable 'green earth fuel' like corn as apposed to fossil fuels like coal and propane, or a deforresting fuel like charcoal?

    Is 'Green Earth Fuel' a selling point or not?
    If there were several people offering forged items for sale, the "green" aspect might make a difference. Unless there's competing producer, my criteria would be quality, uniqueness and cost... not necessarily in that order.

    Corn isn't any more green than charcoal. Corn is grown in fields created by cutting down forests... plowed, fertilized and harvested using fossil fuels...