[TheForge] oxy-propylene
Jerry Frost
akfrosty at mtaonline.net
Mon Jun 25 16:15:01 EDT 2007
From: "Kathy" <keporter at comcast.net>
> Frosty,
> Have you ever thought of writing a modern text on the
> ins and outs of metal
> spinning?
> Mikey
>
>
>
There are a couple reasons it's pretty much out of the
question.
First, I haven't touched a spinning tool since I turned
16, nearly 40 years ago. At that time I wasn't strong
enough to be a full fledged spinner in Dad's shop, I
did mostly finish work. Rolled beads, sharpened
corners, trimmed, polished, etc. I spent endless hours
holding torch while spinners worked: Monel, jet &
rocket engine alloys, Titanium and numerous other
unpronouncable, cassified and forgotten (by me anyway)
alloys.
Second is technique. Ours was a scissor tool shop and
that's been almost entirely taken over by CNC,
automatic and hydraulic machinery. What manual spinning
is still being done is mostly what's known as "hand"
spinning, using simple lever tools rather than compound
lever roller tools.
Every so often I search the web for people doing the
kind of spinning I was familiar with and so far there
seems to be few if any still out there. I've been told
a number of times how scissor spinning isn't "really"
metal spinning at all. REAL craftsmen don't spin that
way you know. You gotta let it go though, hand spinners
were saying the same thing 40-50 years ago when Dad
hired them and trained them to make a living. They're
also the same ones who are generally terrified of
spinning stainless; something we did routinely.
Maybe if I'd actually been a full fledged spinner and
kept up on at least a little but as it stands anything
I wrote would be more dangerous than useful. I'll set
up a lathe when my shop's closed in but it'll be for my
own little projects like a "proper" burner. <grin>
Frosty
-------------------------------
If it ain't forged
it ain't real.
Wrought iron is.
The FrostWorks
Meadow Lakes, AK.
http://www.artmetalradio.com/
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