Pigeon_Droppings2
Member
- Messages
- 6,557
- Location
- london
Nice looking BBQ...there's a real art to cutting up a pineapplePineapple! its pretty posh up your way!
Nice looking BBQ...there's a real art to cutting up a pineapplePineapple! its pretty posh up your way!
Feel for you,until I found this new supplier,in Shrewsbury,I’d got quite down,my old supplier,locally,of 25 years was also despairing,and I had to change loyalties.I wish I could get some here, the quality of the ‘charbon de forge’ available is woeful.
Is Anthracite any good ? We used to get it over here for our coal Aga, it was a tad expensive, but gave out loads of heat.I wish I could get some here, the quality of the ‘charbon de forge’ available is woeful.
Is Anthracite any good ? We used to get it over here for our coal Aga, it was a tad expensive, but gave out loads of heat.
All I know about anthracite is that it gives off more heat than coal.I don’t know Mat, I’m very much an amateur, but I know the stuff I’m getting from my steel merchant is not good, poor heat, very dirty. I know of one blacksmith in the UK that has a supply from the Forest of Dean which is interesting, but despite @nickk ’s kind offer getting it from the UK to here will be too expensive, I need to find a decent French supplier.
Blacksmiths breeze/coke, it’s doubled in price since my last delivery in July!
I wish I could get some here, the quality of the ‘charbon de forge’ available is woeful.
Is Anthracite any good ? We used to get it over here for our coal Aga, it was a tad expensive, but gave out loads of heat.
Nice @Blue Chips , I don't think you need the disclaimer, but it's a nice touch.Speaking of blacksmithing coal and coke, I haven't fired up my little solid-fuel forge for a while. I still have a few bags of bituminous blacksmithing coal stashed in the garage. I've never used anthracite. Checking around, the price of what they call 'nut-size metallurgical grade bituminous blacksmithing coal' seems to run roughly between 30 and 40 dollars for a 50-pound bag, which is the pick-it-up-yourself price. It's good stuff for smithing...burns pretty clean and cokes well, but it's not cheap. Bags of coke are a bit more expensive...maybe an extra 5+ dollars per bag. I think that volume discounts would probably kick in to get a much better price, but I don't do enough forging (or have enough dry storage space) to justify a large load.
This is the small solid-fuel forge that I built a few years ago. I found an old cast-iron forge pan for 20 bucks and then fabricated the rest of it myself, including the frame, tuyere, clinker breaker, grate, ash dump, ash bin, air control, etc. I found an old blower that I adapted, incorporating a silicone turbocharger tube to connect it to the air gate. Instead of a clay pan lining, I made some molds and cast the liner segments with Kast-O-Lite castable refractory (following the Kast-O-Lite instructions to the letter). I made 'nested' inserts so that one set could be removed to enlarge the bird's nest volume. It works well, but I've found that my gas forge is much more convenient to use. I might post some images of their construction when I have some free time. I'm strictly an amateur when it comes to blacksmithing, but when I have the time, and when the weather isn't too hot or too cold for using the forges outside, I enjoy pretending that I'm a blacksmith.
View attachment 385634
View attachment 385635
View attachment 385636
View attachment 385633
My standard disclaimer: I am not a professional blacksmith. I do not guarantee the safety, efficacy, or applicability of any of my designs or ideas that I have described here in this thread. Any use of my designs or ideas is entirely at your own risk.
Probably not needed, but I'm a bit on the obsessive side when it comes to stuff like that. Ounce of prevention, and all that.Nice @Blue Chips , I don't think you need the disclaimer, but it's a nice touch.
Doesn't hurt to be cautious...I stuck mine in my profileProbably not needed, but I'm a bit on the obsessive side when it comes to stuff like that
I had to change loyalties.
That's a lovely portable forge setup!Speaking of blacksmithing coal and coke, I haven't fired up my little solid-fuel forge for a while. I still have a few bags of bituminous blacksmithing coal stashed in the garage. I've never used anthracite. Checking around, the price of what they call 'nut-size metallurgical grade bituminous blacksmithing coal' seems to run roughly between 30 and 40 dollars for a 50-pound bag, which is the pick-it-up-yourself price. It's good stuff for smithing...burns pretty clean and cokes well, but it's not cheap. Bags of coke are a bit more expensive...maybe an extra 5+ dollars per bag. I think that volume discounts would probably kick in to get a much better price, but I don't do enough forging (or have enough dry storage space) to justify a large load.
This is the small solid-fuel forge that I built a few years ago. I found an old cast-iron forge pan for 20 bucks and then fabricated the rest of it myself, including the frame, tuyere, clinker breaker, grate, ash dump, ash bin, air control, etc. I found an old blower that I adapted, incorporating a silicone turbocharger tube to connect it to the air gate. Instead of a clay pan lining, I made some molds and cast the liner segments with Kast-O-Lite castable refractory (following the Kast-O-Lite instructions to the letter). I made 'nested' inserts so that one set could be removed to enlarge the bird's nest/fire pot volume. It works well, but I've found that my gas forge is much more convenient to use. I might post some images of their construction when I have some free time. I'm strictly an amateur when it comes to blacksmithing, but when I have the time, and when the weather isn't too hot or too cold for using the forges outside, I enjoy pretending that I'm a blacksmith.
View attachment 385634
View attachment 385635
View attachment 385636
View attachment 385633
My standard disclaimer: I am not a professional blacksmith. I do not guarantee the safety, efficacy, or applicability of any of my designs or ideas that I have described here in this thread. Any use of my designs or ideas is entirely at your own risk.
Thanks, Dan. I wish I had more free time to play with it (and some other toys).That's a lovely portable forge setup!
...some of the VW transporters are nudging £90kNever understood the high prices and what all the fuss is about vans here in the UK, with people ooooh'ing and aaaah'ing about them. They're just a box on wheels, a utility vehicle. I've had a few over the years and can't see what the big deal is.
Asking and getting are two very different things, same applies to Defenders, campers, custom bikes. Camper vans are mental, think its the post covid escape with over 55s pension they cant afford to-retire on...some of the VW transporters are nudging £90k....still people asking £20k for 30year old builders vans with some IKEA furniture screwed badly into the back
![]()
You are not wrong about the camper vans! As for Defenders, I have been offered £10k for my 1987 90 and it is not a pretty beast!Asking and getting are two very different things, same applies to Defenders, campers, custom bikes. Camper vans are mental, think its the post covid escape with over 55s pension they cant afford to-retire on
I bought a used transporter with around 60 thousand miles on it a few years back, thought it was expensive for what it was, but it suited our needs to haul materials for our house restoration project, and collect some machinery I've bought on occasion for my workshop. A while later, my Wife convinced me that adding some aluminium wheels and a couple of shiny bits would give it a needed face lift, and it did; but the van still just a box on wheels to me....some of the VW transporters are nudging £90k....still people asking £20k for 30year old builders vans with some IKEA furniture screwed badly into the back
![]()