how to forge drifts for hammers and top tools
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- Опубликовано: 20 окт 2024
- I had a commission by a Dutch customer who wanted to buy top tool and hammer eye drifts and I used the occasion to make this tutorial video as requested by many people including my friend Matt Marty and Facebook acquaintance Brett Miles.
This is one of the best and most underrated forging and smithing channels on RUclips. I really hope they would make videos again.
Came back to watch this video for a drift I need to make today. Thank you, even 4 years later this video still helps me. :)
Friis Forge Hey! Love your videos Christopher :D
Very professional and informative demo Mr Daniel. Your client will be proud to own these tools.
Congratulations on your English. Much appreciated.
Really GREAT video daniel was fun to watch all the way through, keep them coming dude i learned a lot as usual, cheers!
Nicely done and a great vid. Others I've watched used a grinder or sander but not you. You are a true Craftsman, good job.
Really liked the video, it is the first of yours I have seen. The hexagon method was very helpful and your detailed explanations were great. I hope you continue to do more blacksmith videos as you have a knack for teaching. Thank you!
I've been looking for a video on this subject for quite some time. great explaining !
Thank you Daniel for the video in which my tools are made!!! Again I learned a lot, such as why to make the hexagonal taper. Keep on making beautiful tools and those great videos.
I know all too well about burning knuckles on planishing blows ha ha!
Nice job Daniel and by the way your English is great!
Cheers!
Excellent video. I was having a hard time finding one inch bar stock, then u mentioned axle rod and that reminded me that I have two of those. Your technique worked amazingly. But now I can't drive my car. Lol. J/k
Thanks Daniel!
This is great information for my next drifts
Good video
thank you for another really good tutorial . i really apperciate all off your efforts and your knowledge .
Great video! Thanks for posting good useful information and excellent footage. Much appreciated Dan
Great vid Daniel! I really enjoy your tutorials. Helped me a lot man! Thanks
thanks Daniel. this is a very good video. very helpful. keep up the good work
I just found Your channel and must say that i really liked it. Keep up good work. Love Your hammer by the way.
Wow, 19,832 views, 244 likes and 0 dislikes. This is a record! Congratulations, you have a good video.
Great video, Matt and I are getting together Saturday to do dome forging.
Nice work Daniel! I'm not familiar with the term "squishy" heat, but I get the idea, LOL!
Albert
One really good tip for measuring at the forge if you dont have a metal ruler, find an old steel divider. With that you can take measurements from any tape or folding rule or even from a scale drawing(!) without measuring anything. Dennis from DF - In the shop has a video on how to forge a devider like that yourself but you can also find them on yardsales/fleamarkets or brand new from china. They might not very pretty but do work!
Always love your videos!
I'm digging your guillotine tool that's pretty nifty
Hello, I live in Brazil several times and watch your videos in order to learn about the art of forging. I would like to ask if you have any technique that could use to conduct a spring drive to leave it as a straight bar without cutting it into pieces? If you can help me would be great. Grateful, Luiz
If you want to make a long piece of spring you need to straighten a little bit first with your hammer and then always heat up the section that you want to straighten and stick the end of the spring in the pritchel or hary hole or into the vice. The use your hands or tongs to bend the piece and use the residual heat to straighten it on the anvil. Continue that process until you have the desired length of straight spring steel. Make sure not to put dents into the steel by hitting with a too small hammer with too small eges or accidentally having parts of the bar on a sharp edge of your anvil when you straighten it.
Daniel, Thank you so much for all that you do to help us understand making tools. Can you tell me what the standard hole sizes are for a hammers? Is it based on the weight of the hammer?
Hello Kent! I don't drift the holes to a specific size. I kind of go with how much I need to finish the hammer properly and what looks right to me. For a normal 3 1/2 lbs hammer I'd go with about 1 1/4 x 3/4 inch. But that is up to you, your material, hand size, etc.
Great information in the video, I do have one thought for you. When you were doing the hot cut at the end to remove the excess length, you were cutting at the far end of the heat and it looked a bit tough to get through. Center that heat for your cut in the future. Keep up the good work!
Thanks Ryan, I unfortunately heated up the piece not in the perfect place but I wanted to cut it at a certain spot so I had to make do with that low end heat...
HI Daniel, great work and great video as usual! I am copying your drift and using the same process. How long did your tapered section end up ? I started at 4" from the end as you did and just want to make sure I tapered it down enough. Thanks
ka2pbo I would go 1/3 to 1/2 of the dimention of the starting stock. So if you started with 1 1/4" you might want to end up with something ~ 1/2".
Hi, excusesme but I havent understand why your hammer have a a round head. Is it to avoid mark the metal or is it just because it's just more efficient ?
Thanks for the video, I at least understand how to make the tool to make eye for hammers and maybe axes.
The rounding face is like that because the shape reduces surface area contact and moves the steel more efficiently. Good luck with your projects!
Thank you. I know now how to be more efficient :) Good luck too.
Great video, keep it up!
Goodness gracious that anvil is loud! I felt like I was standing there without ear plugs by the halfway mark.
its a peddinghaus. perfectly normal.
Very good video Daniel. Thanks for sharing. Is there any heat treating for a drift made of 4140?
No you don´t need to heat treat these. It wouldn´t make sense anyway, because the drift gets very hot during use and would lose all temper anyhow.
That makes sense. Thanks Daniel
by car axle do you mean like axle shaft ?!
Have you ever used an "Induction Forge" to heat your metals? (versus a coal/coke forge). The heat time seems to be much faster with the Induction forge, and One doesn't have to directly breathe lots of Carbon monoxide, and coal/coke ash. (They run on Electricity).
I have never used an induction forge myself but I know they're very fast and very clean but also extremely expensive and use shittons of electricity. They are rather something for big constrution shops than for a little hobby forge like mine.
Hello Daniel, great viideos, I really love your channel. Just one little question, were do you buy your steel? Is there any chances that you know an European online dealer with good materials?
Nerfeel There are a few ways to get ahold of that kind of steel. First of all of course steel supply stores. They´re usually wholesale companies that sell to metal work businesses. If you can´t find one or they won´t sell to you in small amounts ask some of your local machining and tool making companies. They should have steel or at least be able to order steel and sell it to you. Some might even have scraps they´ll give you for free.
Otherwise one can also find steel on the internet. I´ve actually bought steel off of eBay a couple of times. But for Europe Abrams Premium Steel is also an online supplyer.
If you´re looking for cheap material go to a scrap yard and ask for car axles.
Daniel Lea Brilliant, Europe Abrams Premium is exactly what I was looking for! Thanks Danel!
Woher bekommst du das Material für so ein Tool? Ich finde maximal 8mm Material?
Benjamin Schemme Für die Durchschlage empfehle ich 42CrMo4 (AISI 4140 / Deutsche Werkstoffnummer 1.7225). Den Stahl habe ich auch im Video verwendet.
Wenn du nicht direkt einen Stahlhändler in deinem Ort hat, kannst du u. U. auch bei Werkzeugbaubetrieben nachfragen, ob die dir welchen besorgen können.
Online gibt es immer wieder einige Angebote auf eBay: www.ebay.de/sch/i.html?_from=R40&_trksid=p2050601.m570.l1313.TR2.TRC1.A0.H0.X42CrMo4.TRS0&_nkw=42CrMo4&_sacat=0
Auch hier habe ich einen Großteil meines Werkzeugstahls bestellt:
www.marks-gmbh.de/Rohmaterial-Zuschnitte-rund-flach-gezog.-6kt-selbst-kalkulieren/Material-Laengenzuschnitte-nach-Ihren-Vorgaben-selbst-kalkulieren.html
Is there any heat treatment for these? I know it wasn't mentioned, it just seems you might want it hardened a little. Thank you
It wouldn't make any sense to harden a drift since they heat up anyways when used sometimes even to red heat. So they'll just lose their temper anyways.
Love your video's Danny, Sub'd
What you used to make steel drifts ? I am Spanish and did not understand
Allen VDJ You can for example use C45 or 42CrMo4 or spring steel.
Daniel Lea thanks
always enjoy your videos ... how heavy is the rounding hammer you're using?
The hammer in this video is 4 1/2 lbs.
thanks
wo kaufst du dein zubehör? wie diese blockdrahtbürste ? und wo bekommt man speziellen stahl her ?
Die Blockdrahtbürse habe ich geschenkt bekommen, als ich in den USA war. Die gibt es so nicht in Deutschland zu kaufen, nur die aus Kunststoff, diese werden als "Hackblock Bürste" im Fleischereibedarf verkauft. Stahl kannst du entweder second hand von Werkezugbauunternehmen und Drehereien bekommen oder von Stahlhändlern, die auch an private verkaufen. Wenn du einen Gewerbeschein hast, oder jemanden mit Gewerbeschein kennst, kannst du den Stahl auch direkt vom Großhändler beziehen. Es gibt auch Onlinehändler wie Marks Normalien GmbH oder Abrams Premium Stahl, bei denen du Stahl bestellen kannst. Ansonsten haben auch die Messermachershops und einige Anbieter auf eBay Stähle im Angebot.
Jo danke
I want to know how you put together that fuller set
A friend of mine had made it for me. It's basically a square bar split and spread and then two pieces of tool steel rivited onto the inside.
I'm a bit confused on forging a drift. I am a bit confused on how to make sure I am turning the piece 60and 30 degrees. Making the hexagon and taper seems to be the hardest part for me. Any tips? Also, I am making this so I can make a rounding hammer and I see you use a rounding hammer in the video, so can it be done without? Maybe I will just buy one from you or Brazeal or someone cause this seems to be so difficult to me. Thanks
+Matt Behnke It is hard to explain. You basically first make 1/3 turns in the beginning. So you will get three flat sides and 3 round sides. And then you just hit all the sides that formed. If you can't get the hang of it just forge it out square and then forge down the corners to make it 8-sided and then again to make it 16-sided and then make it round.
Sure you don't need a rounding hammer for this but the hammer should have a substancial weight of at least 3 1/2 lbs and a properly dressed face. And it should be over all comfortable to work with because you need to do quite some heavy forging with it.
Thanks for the response. I am 13 so I can't swing two heavy a hammer cause I don't have fully grown muscles yet but I think 3.5 pounds I will be able to swing. Thanks for all the help
Also did you make that spring fuller, if so can you explain a bit on how you made it. Thanks for all you help and time
+Matt Behnke It is two pieces of tool steel flat bar, ground round on one side rivited inbetween two plates of steel with a shank that fits the hardy hole split, fit around it and rivited to it. You might want to google for "blacksmith's helper" "smithing magician" or "guillotine tool" for more information on such kinds of tools.
Please make more more material
Would you need to temper the steel after forging the drifting tool?
No you don't need to do that as the drift is a hot working tool anyways and any temper would be thus lost whilst the drift being used for its intended purpose.
thanks Daniel for you great wisdom as im still learning off my own back and have not been able to get a Apperenticeship with a blacksmith here in Ireland
Daniel are these heat treated ? If so how far up the tool ? Also do they need to be tempered in an oven? Thanks
+Gary Busby Hello Gary,
Drifts are tools used inside the eye of a glowing piece of steel and thus heat up very quickly way beyond any reasonable tempering point, which is why it would be senseless to heat treat a drift.
+Daniel Lea I never thought of it like that but you do heat treat the slot punch correct?
+Gary Busby I usually don't. But you can heat treat a slot punch for punching small things that won't heat up the punch so much. Gotta work fast and careful then though.
i'm so confused. 64k views and less than 1k likes.... how the forge is this possible
What is the starting dimensions of the tool steel you startout with?
Matthew Wise he clearly states in the video that he started with about 4" of 1" stock for the taper, plus some for the handle of the drift.
Why can't I do a four sided taper than eight sided and than squeeze it together to get that oval shape ?
Watched 10 Sec longer and got the answer 😂😂😂
:'P
Hey ! I'm 14yo i just tried to forge one....that's soooo hard! I failed because i've flaten too much and it's not anymore a taper...that's sad 😅
1045 would probably not suffice for this project would it?
If you use it very carefully it should last you for a couple of tools. But generally you want to get something more ductile than 1045. But if that is all you have it will suffice at least until you can get your hands on some 4140.
Daniel Lea you were right about 1045 lasting a couple tools. Two top tools and one 2lb hammer and its developed a small crack about 20mil from the tip. Im ordering some 4140 now but my goodness is it expensive. Lol $70 for 4 foot of 1 1/2".
4140 will also not hold forever but it is a little bit thougher especially for hot work. 4140 can sometimes be even cheaper than 1045. If you don´t have to pay shipping it shouldn´t cost more than 50$ per 4 feet.
Daniel Lea I decided to just bite the bullet and dump a couple hundred in some 5160 of different sizes. Its worth it in the long run. Tools are not easy for me to make so I want it to last as long as possible. Lol. I still struggle on the hexagonal tapering you showed.
Daniel Lea ok Daniel I really just cant seem to do this right. How much is the commission for this tool. My email is cjv3904@rocketmail.com. I am state side and don't know if that's and issue for shipping or not. I made crap of some 5160 and blew my 1045 apart.
am a stone mason what steel do i need to make masonry hammers
trustinJesus Certainly not the easiest decision to make. Personally I would prefer a steel that is not too hard because otherwise it would chip easily from the impact on stone. On the other hand it should be resilient to erosion. So you mainly want a tough steel. Then also it has to be forgeable which rules out some of the high performance steels which can't really be hand forged. So in conclusion the steels which come into my mind are the shock resistant high strength low alloy steels (HSLA), such as L6 or 4340. Those are also commonly used on jackhammer bits and are fairly easy to forge and re-work.
Daniel Lea thanks 👍
Did you forge that hammer with Brian?
Yes and no. I forged it with Josh McLaren, whilst I was the director and he the striker. But we did so at Brian Brazeal's shop.
Daniel Lea that's awesome!I'm from Mississippi and forged my hammers and got cut with Bryan.best class I've ever attended!
Is that an Alec Steele hammer?
No , he probably forged it himself , both him and Alec was tought by Brian brazeal who is the god of rounding hammers
Why put in all the work forming the hexagon, and then to round it out again? Why not just taper down and then flatten both sides?
What do you mean? You have to forge it in a polygonal shape because you can't draw it out round.
Why is it impossible to draw it out round? I'm sure you can tell I am not a blacksmith.
Well that is actually rather difficult to explain. Like if you would try it you'd immediately see that it makes no sense. Uhhmm basically when you forge you're squshing the material between two tools or dies so either hammer and anvil or the top and bottom die on a power hammer. That makes it nescissary that the material needs to have force applied from the top and needs equal support from the bottom. That is why you need a sort of polygonal shape because if you'd try to forge round it would just get all crooked and wouldn't really work. It would also twist the material which would make it tear.
Sorry, Daniel - I understand, but I don't understand. I usually do a taper like that by going to square, then back to round. Why the hex?
Because you get closer to the final (round) dimention in the same time compared to if you do first square then octagonal and round.
Bist du deutsch? Da hast glaube ich einen deutschen amboss und irgendwie hast du auch einen deutschen Akzent...
20mm = 3/4 inch 10 mm = 3/8 inch
a drift is a punch
chance kiki Actually a drift is not necessarily a punch. A drift can be used to enlarge an already existing hole hence not a punch. Better to listen to the terms used for a certain crafts tools.