[TheForge] Dont put your tongue on a frozen anvil

Grover Richardson grover.richardson at gtri.gatech.edu
Wed Sep 29 12:33:32 EDT 2004


Now, that makes sense.  Good point.  Had forgotten that part.  Still, I
would (also) like to see some papers on properties of metal at 90 F and 20
F.

-----Original Message-----
From: theforge-bounces at mailman.qth.net
[mailto:theforge-bounces at mailman.qth.net] On Behalf Of Chris Kilpatrick
Sent: Wednesday, September 29, 2004 11:31 AM
To: Sponsored by ABANA
Subject: RE: [TheForge] FW: [The_Anvil] Dont put your tongue on a frozen
anvil


the major thing being overlooked in this conversation is not the difference
in heat between 1800 and 20 degrees, but the properties of steel at 20
degrees.  The colder steel gets the more3 brittle it gets.  The more work
hardening that is done in the cold weather, the exponentially worse it gets.
Each hit on a cold anvil causes more stress risers to appear than a hit on a
warm anvil, as the steel is to brittle to absorb and dissipate all the force
it would at a warmer temp.

-Chris K.

----- Original Message -----
From: "Hufford, David" <David.Hufford at EKU.EDU>
Date: Wed, 29 Sep 2004 10:44:39 -0400
To: "Sponsored by ABANA" <theforge at mailman.qth.net>
Subject: RE: [TheForge] FW: [The_Anvil] Dont put your tongue on a frozen
anvil

> I've heard tales about horns breaking off anvils when struck cold.  
> However, seems it would take a heavy blow to accomplish this even on a 
> cold anvil.  What do the metallurgists have to say about this?  I 
> think the major problem with a cold anvil is as a heat sink ... the 
> work piece does seem to cool more quickly.  Thus, in the winter, I use 
> a magnetic engine block heater (available from tractor supply) to keep 
> the anvil warm between forging sessions (I have an unheated shop). 
> David Hufford Richmond KY
> 
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It is I who formed the blacksmith, 
who fans the flame into a fire and
fashions a weapon fit for it's work.

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