Building an Indoor Blacksmithing Shop Part 3 - Restoring a Blacksmith Shop | Iron Wolf Industrial

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  • Опубликовано: 25 мар 2018
  • It's been long enough. Time for a stack arrangement that draws, and doesn't flood the shop. I cut a hole in the roof of the blacksmithing shop, and install a custom thimble to match the new stack perfectly.
    For more information, custom orders, or questions:
    IronWolfIndustrial/
    www.ironwolfindustrial.com
    ironwolfindustrial@gmail.com
    Follow us @ironwolfindustrial on Instagram for all our latest projects
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Комментарии • 11

  • @bobbobs2802
    @bobbobs2802 6 лет назад +1

    Simplicity is the best tool

  • @shadowcastre
    @shadowcastre 6 лет назад +1

    I agree.. my opinion is also that a vertical stack is the easiest to make and maintain. The extra height is crucial for proper draft.
    Mine is 12 inch diameter, and 16 ft tall, with 4 feet above the roof line, and 3 guy lines for stability. I have a China cap that works well but have been toying with trying a turbine/rotary cap.
    Thanks for the video...

    • @IronWolfIndustrial
      @IronWolfIndustrial  6 лет назад +1

      Great comment - it did not appear in my inbox for some odd reason. You are lucky to have 12" pipe - I had a hard time finding it out my way for cheap. Sounds like you've got a pretty good setup. Thanks for the comments as always

  • @darkness0334
    @darkness0334 6 лет назад +1

    Cool setup!

  • @jeffsmith6441
    @jeffsmith6441 6 лет назад +1

    Nice!

  • @jackgeedubs1855
    @jackgeedubs1855 6 лет назад +3

    Another way to remove zinc is to leave in vinegar for the night

    • @IronWolfIndustrial
      @IronWolfIndustrial  6 лет назад

      Great tip - Thanks Jack

    • @jackgeedubs1855
      @jackgeedubs1855 6 лет назад

      You're welcome! Don't forget to wash it off with water and bicarbonate of soda to neautralise the acid though

  • @jcmillercrossedblessedoutd1421
    @jcmillercrossedblessedoutd1421 6 лет назад +1

    Hey Iron, great video and share, your talented:)...question.....you prefer coal over propane? Hotter, more cost effective, or propane for small knife projects, etc???? Just wondering and wanting to learn. I would like to build a forge but live in a small town and not sure of coal burning within “city”limits! Thank you!!
    PS - My Instagram user name is “@CrossedBlessedOutdoors”, I follow you there also, great channel✌🏻

    • @IronWolfIndustrial
      @IronWolfIndustrial  6 лет назад +2

      Hey JC - I was curious about that. I most definitely prefer coal over propane. You can get hotter, quicker heats, in more specific areas. In addition, you've got a quicker startup and shutdown time, and it is dirt cheap compared to propane, provided you have access to it. For working in city limits, propane might be your better option. However, even bituminous forging coal doesn't produce a huge amount of smoke. For a coal fired forge, anthracite will burn the hottest and cleanest (See my video on tractor supply coal ruclips.net/video/llWUhFV3dNY/видео.html ) and for a propane forge, for simplicity's sake, build a blown burner. You can build a blown-burner gas forge and have it fired up within a day or two. My build video here: ruclips.net/video/bZsY6mLGXt4/видео.html
      In summary - find some good, hard coal, or build a blown burner propane forge.

    • @jcmillercrossedblessedoutd1421
      @jcmillercrossedblessedoutd1421 6 лет назад

      Iron Wolf Industrial thank you sir. Appreciate the info from you. Off to the videos I go:):)✌🏻