[TheForge] Re: File Making, sniffing up wrought iron
Andrew Vida
osan at netlabs.net
Sun Mar 23 08:15:33 EST 2008
And where on the coast would this be? :)
I dug a good 1/4 ton of wrought out of the Columbia and Willamette
rivers. There are old docks in Vancouver where they used to build the
Liberty ships during the war. I found a lot of dogs for sistering up
cribbing buried in the sand, as well as chain, tooling (with welded
bits), tie bolts and other items. I pounded some of it with Ralph
Douglas (anyone hear from him?) at his house and got no such hints of
noxious death from the material, so I suppose the salts may indeed have
something to do with it.
Of course, we cannot rule out that most of my wrought was found in NJ,
pollution capital of the USA. Who knows what else might be on that
iron. OTOH, the material I pulled out of the water in Philly gives off
the same fume as well.
Just before I left to WA I had the opportunity to get a great piece of
wrought they dug out of the graveyard in Perth. Looked like
triple-refined, judging by the etch - appeared to be part of a derrick
of some sort - 4 1/2" solid round and perhaps 15 ft long, all bent up
and somewhere about 800#. Got the call to go to WA on a Friday and was
at work the following Monday, so that one got away. Shame, too...
looked like prime iron.
Peter Fels And Phoebe Palmer wrote:
> No odd smells from heating the WI pulled from a 1905 wreck here on the
> Pacific coast. It does tend to separate into individual fibers unless
> worked at a welding heat though.
> The odd thing about it is that if heated with a rosebud and bent with a
> bending fork, it cracks at the bend...but does not crack when hammered
> to the same angle.
> They used rude 1" hot rivets on 1' centers to hold that old hull
> together. Now , after more than 100 years of being pounded on an
> exposed, open ocean beach, parts of it are still together...pf
>
>
> Larry Brown wrote:
>>
>> Speaking from the other side or the Arthur Kill, and being 49 I
>> remember all sorts of nasty stuff on the beaches over the years, being
>> cleaner in more recent times. NJ has and had tons of nasty chemical
>> companies along the eastern NJ boarder with Staten Island and NY and
>> we had or have the world's biggest dump in the marsh along the river.
>>
>> I remember working in Whitte ship scrapyard when I was 18 that
>> cutting sometimes gave some foul odors, usually on the older stuff
>> that had been soaking or on the bottom the longest. I think the guy
>> who repaired the holes in the bottom of the barges by welding plates
>> between the ribs had very little left in the way of vocal cords.
>> I thought it might be the salt absorbed into the metal. I have some
>> pieces of WI from old docks and a few just foam when heated. I found
>> that steel and WI are both affected and have seen what looks like a
>> crust near the edges after the piece cools when you torch cut it.
>> Might be on the surface or from within
>>
>> Larry BRown
>>
>> At 09:26 AM 3/20/2008 -0400, you wrote:
>>> Speaking of fumes, much of the wrought iron I pulled out of Raritan
>>> Bay in Perth Amboy gives off a fume that is really nasty. You get
>>> the tiniest whiff and everything inside you says "NO!". I have
>>> learned to steer clear of this. Put the iron in the fire awhile and
>>> let whatever noxious things that are there burn off while giving a
>>> respectful berth.
>>>
>>> What I could not quite figure is what those noxious things may have
>>> been. The fumes are most acrid - very harsh on the nose, and
>>> something of a singular sensation (please, no lapsing into "A Chorus
>>> Line"). I also notice the occasional strange blue flame. Not like
>>> copper, but not like anything else either, of which I am familiar.
>>> Any ideas? This iron has lain in the brackish-to-salty waters of the
>>> bay for at least 50 years, closer to 100 in most cases I would
>>> imagine - old ship graveyard.
>>>
>>> -Andy
>>>
>>> Larry Brown wrote:
>>>> Thanks for the information in the post, I always try to stay away
>>>> from the fumes as it stinks, but the cyanide information is really
>>>> good to be aware of. Don't use it much, got the can 2nd hand and
>>>> have had it 20+ yrs.
>>>> Larry Brown
>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> Manage membership or unsubscribe at:
>> http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/theforge
>> theforge mail list group photo site is
>> http://www.photoaccess.com
>> Login: blacksmithblacksmith at hotmail.com
>> password: anvil
>> ___________
>>
>>
>>
> _______________________________________________
> Manage membership or unsubscribe at:
> http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/theforge
> theforge mail list group photo site is
> http://www.photoaccess.com
> Login: blacksmithblacksmith at hotmail.com
> password: anvil
> ___________
>
>
--
-Andy V.
no .sig
go .fig
More information about the TheForge
mailing list