[TheForge] Anvil Shoot
rhrocker at hilconet.com
rhrocker at hilconet.com
Tue Nov 3 13:30:21 EST 2009
Good point Charles! I've got one old anvil that's missing it's horn. I don't buy the Civil War
rumors about destroying anvils so they can't be used again. Makes one wonder if it wasn't in a
anvil shoot back in 1898 or so, and on it's way back down it hit the base station anvil and lost
the horn. Or maybe the horn blew through a crowd and................(could happen!)
Robert Hensarling
rhrocker at hilconet.com
www.mesquiterocker.com
Uvalde, Texas
>------- Original Message -------
>From : xlch58 at swbell.net[mailto:xlch58 at swbell.net]
>Sent : 11/3/2009 9:55:49 AM
>To : theforge at mailman.qth.net
>Cc :
>Subject : RE: Re: [TheForge] Anvil Shoot
>
>rhrocker at hilconet.com wrote:
> Ok, just a quick thought from a South Texas. I love the shoots, but have never seen one in
> person. Admittedly, some of the videos I've seen were scarry! However I think if it is handled
> properly then I sure don't have a problem with it. It should be done by an expert of some sort,
> fire department personal (they do our firecracker displays) or someone with some explosive
> experience. The main idea is to be careful while setting up and shooting, so a 5+ minute fuse,
and
> no one within 250 feet (or whatever a safe distance is) might would work. That's for the safely
> issue, but the liability and all that, I dunno.
>
>
> Robert Hensarling
> rhrocker at hilconet.com
> www.mesquiterocker.com
> Uvalde, Texas
>
>
>
I think the issue would be how far a bullet sized shard of anvil base
could fly with lethal potential. Not entirely unlikely when you
consider the age and abuse these anvils get and the laminated
construction of the wrought iron variety, though a thorough pre-flight
inspection for cracks would help mitigate that. I remember years ago
reading a story of a man who was killed when a shard from a splitting
wedge spalled off and nicked his jugular. Bled to death before help
arrived. I have always dressed all of my tools (chisels, mauls etc)
studiously ever since. There is a blacksmithing book out there, called
something like the "How to make woodworking tools" that the smith is
using the most lethal looking set of abused hammer tools I have ever seen.
Anvil shoots are rare enough that it is probably difficult for an
actuarialist to calculate a risk for insurance purposes, so you get a
silly number from insurers. Many good organizations have been erased
by litigation, so I understand Abana's viewpoint.
Charles
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