Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Ads...

I've had a few emails this morning asking me what happened to my ads. My AdSense account has been disabled, but Google won't say why (it's a "trade secret").  I did submit a help request last week asking why I wasn't getting page impressions but I was seeing ad clicks- no response (surprise). I appealed the disabling of the account and we'll just have to see what happens.  I guess you folks were just -too- curious about the advertisers.
 
I may have to reinstate the paypal buttons.

Monday, November 16, 2009

Almost out there...

I'm almost done with this semester- then next semester will be one class, a seminar and an internship, then an internship over the summer and I'm done with my distance degree. After this, I'm hoping to be accepted to graduate school where I can study blacksmithing in either the colonial or fur trade era.
In the mean time, I'm thinking about working on projects from Sonn's book or carving knives out of smaller, thin stock. Those would be quick, and useful tools are always satisfying. Mostly just bored, not really tired and wanting to blog about something.

Monday, November 9, 2009

Hammer-in report


Alright, I'mma be honest.  The hammer-in left me a little bummed, and I think it's because I really want to be out in the shop making things, but haven't had much of an opportunity. However, here I am on Monday, sitting at work while our main system is down, and I'm pretty excited about a question that was posed.  Why not make a blade out of just 15N20?  For those not in the know, 15N20 is a steel that is usually added to a stack of other steels in pattern welded billets because the nickel resists most etching solutions- this gives very bright areas to contrast the darker carbon areas. 

I don't see why it wouldn't work.  Most 15N20 has about 0.75% carbon (which is a mid range carbon content) plus the nickel adds abrasion resistance.  I think it would be cool to try.  I can't look at many suppliers through the company firewall, but Admiral steel has 0.065x8x36" sheets for about $32. (that's just over 1/16 inch, so probably a 14 gage? sheet).  Maybe a little thin, but that's another thing Geoff was talking about- how thin can you make a blade that still performs most of the duties you want it to? It would be very difficult to forge a blade that starts at 1/16" (most will be forged to approximate shape, then thinned to about that thickness) but certainly many blades end up at 1/16". 

Maybe I'll give it a try.

As for his press, it's pretty awesome.  It squished a 2x2x6" billet without any fuss and the resulting pattern was tightly welded, even at the ends where these things tend to split or not weld properly.  Next time I'll show up the night before to help him set up, and I'll make sure someone drives into town to refill at least one of the propane tanks.


Friday, November 6, 2009

Hammer-in tryout

A good friend has built a hydraulic press and he's unveiling it this weekend. I don't have a lot of specifics, aside from knowing that he did a lot of additional wiring to 3 phase, had to find some specialized parts and I have no doubt it's bad ass.
He's a journeyman bladesmith and will likely spend most of his time using it for pattern welded (damascus) steel. I can't wait to see it in action, and to see what he does with it. He's having a bit of a BBQ/BYOB- it will be very nice to get out of the house and away from the books for the better part of the day.

Monday, October 26, 2009

Back again

I'm still in school, still plugging away. I dropped a class this semester to preserve my GPA- no detailed, long winded complaining. I just thought this guy was taking off points for really weak reasons and he was bragging in emails that the average for his classes is 78%. I'll just say that that would kill my GPA. Plus we had group projects which aren't any fun in real life, but they're downright painful in cyberspace.

The above means that I had some free time over the weekend, so I cleaned up the shop area. It took almost three hours to break down the boxes that had accumulated, sweep up and throw away all of the garbage that built up over the past few months. When I feel like I have some free time, I can head on out and do whatever. I just need to feel like I can put the books down (to be fair, I goofed off nearly all weekend, just to unwind from school stress).
I don't have any immediate plans, though I'd like to start working on reproducing items from Albert Sonn's "Early American Iron Work." On Nov 7 I'll be heading over to a friend's house for what should be a rededication of his shop and he'll show off his home-built hydraulic press. Sounds like good times to me.