Are any balls suitable for planishing?
- fghthty545y
- Archive Member
- Posts: 1133
- Joined: Tue Jun 22, 2010 9:09 am
- Location: San Diego
Are any balls suitable for planishing?
Like would a billard or croquet ball be usable and resistant to damage?
I've just been using a hardwood sphere, and it gets nicks sometimes.
I've just been using a hardwood sphere, and it gets nicks sometimes.
- InsaneIrish
- SQUEEE!
- Posts: 18252
- Joined: Thu Aug 10, 2000 1:01 am
- Location: Jefferson City Mo. USA
Are you talking as a ball stake or using them as the hammer?
Either way, I would not be to keen on using them.
Either way, I would not be to keen on using them.
Insane Irish
Quote: "Nissan Maxima"
(on Pennsic) I know that movie. It is the 13th warrior. A bunch of guys in armour that doesn't match itself or anybody elses, go on a trip and argue and get drunk and get laid and then fight Tuchux.
Quote: "Nissan Maxima"
(on Pennsic) I know that movie. It is the 13th warrior. A bunch of guys in armour that doesn't match itself or anybody elses, go on a trip and argue and get drunk and get laid and then fight Tuchux.
- fghthty545y
- Archive Member
- Posts: 1133
- Joined: Tue Jun 22, 2010 9:09 am
- Location: San Diego
- InsaneIrish
- SQUEEE!
- Posts: 18252
- Joined: Thu Aug 10, 2000 1:01 am
- Location: Jefferson City Mo. USA
You might try finishing and polishing a railroad spike, then clamp that into a vise. I believe Halberds does that for his Newbie armouring tool kit.
Insane Irish
Quote: "Nissan Maxima"
(on Pennsic) I know that movie. It is the 13th warrior. A bunch of guys in armour that doesn't match itself or anybody elses, go on a trip and argue and get drunk and get laid and then fight Tuchux.
Quote: "Nissan Maxima"
(on Pennsic) I know that movie. It is the 13th warrior. A bunch of guys in armour that doesn't match itself or anybody elses, go on a trip and argue and get drunk and get laid and then fight Tuchux.
-
Norman
- Archive Member
- Posts: 4313
- Joined: Thu Aug 10, 2000 1:01 am
- Location: East Brunswick, NJ, USA
- Contact:
get a trailer hitch ball -- just grind the flat part rounder
Norman
SilkRoadDesign Arts- http://www.srdarts.com
Armour of the Silk Road http://www.archive.org(www.geocities.com/normlaw)
JewishWarriors - http://www.reocities.com/jewishwarriors
Red Kaganate - http://www.redkaganate.org
Email kaganate&yahoo.com
SilkRoadDesign Arts- http://www.srdarts.com
Armour of the Silk Road http://www.archive.org(www.geocities.com/normlaw)
JewishWarriors - http://www.reocities.com/jewishwarriors
Red Kaganate - http://www.redkaganate.org
Email kaganate&yahoo.com
- Pitbull Armory
- Archive Member
- Posts: 5312
- Joined: Wed Dec 17, 2008 10:28 pm
- Location: Out in the woods
- Contact:
Hi
Hi Jojo, I have some different sized balls I can make stakes out of, what size did you want? Halberds has some great stakes too you can see them at pitbullarmory.com on the tools page.
Take care
Pitbull
Take care
Pitbull
Hi, Please visit https://www.facebook.com/PITBULL-ARMORY-264094743168/ if you get time. Or contact me at leiderandy@yahoo.com if you have any questions. Take care, Andy @ Pitbull Armory
-
Thomas Powers
- Archive Member
- Posts: 13112
- Joined: Fri Aug 11, 2000 1:01 am
- Location: Socorro, New Mexico
Let me rephrase what I hear you saying: "I want to spend hundreds of dollars extra of my time to avoid paying someone $20 to weld up a ball stake for me"
Now does this change your viewpoint on this?
The inside ball needs to be hard and heavy and smooth and firmly mounted to resist the hammer being used on the outside. Yes you can use other things---but you loose efficiency doing so!
If you were local I'd trade welding up a couple of ball stakes for mowing my yard!
Thomas
Now does this change your viewpoint on this?
The inside ball needs to be hard and heavy and smooth and firmly mounted to resist the hammer being used on the outside. Yes you can use other things---but you loose efficiency doing so!
If you were local I'd trade welding up a couple of ball stakes for mowing my yard!
Thomas
- somedudeinutah
- Archive Member
- Posts: 245
- Joined: Sun Nov 08, 2009 11:33 pm
- sha-ul
- Archive Member
- Posts: 10636
- Joined: Sat Sep 09, 2006 4:16 pm
- Location: barony of vatavia,calontir, west of Wichita
- Contact:
Thomas Powers wrote:If you were local I'd trade welding up a couple of ball stakes for mowing my yard!
Thomas
??? mow what? I didn't see any grass
but that was one big bug on the wall
Whenever the legislators endeavor to take away and destroy the property of the people, or to reduce them to slavery under arbitrary power, they put themselves into a state of war with the people, who are thereupon absolved from any further obedience
- fghthty545y
- Archive Member
- Posts: 1133
- Joined: Tue Jun 22, 2010 9:09 am
- Location: San Diego
-
Konstantin the Red
- Archive Member
- Posts: 26713
- Joined: Sun Oct 21, 2001 1:01 am
- Location: Port Hueneme CA USA
Bowling balls usually get used as hammers, not stakes, for fairly shallow curvatures and dishes. Setting an eyebolt into a hole that way and slinging the bowling ball from a garage rafter with a bungee cord has proven highly effective in forestalling fatigue. You whonk the bowling ball into the metal, set upon a dish or on sandbags, using both hands. It's a really short, really round pile driver, and usable by one man, where a hand-type pile driver really needs two men, one on the driver and one manipulating the steel sheet.
Meanwhile find out what a trailer hitch ball costs at Pep Boys and at a swap meet. They make great beginner ball stakes, especially with that flat rounded over. Makes a good other curve radius, for in effect just about two ball stakes in one.
Meanwhile find out what a trailer hitch ball costs at Pep Boys and at a swap meet. They make great beginner ball stakes, especially with that flat rounded over. Makes a good other curve radius, for in effect just about two ball stakes in one.
"The Minstrel Boy to the war is gone..."
-
Thomas Powers
- Archive Member
- Posts: 13112
- Joined: Fri Aug 11, 2000 1:01 am
- Location: Socorro, New Mexico
- sha-ul
- Archive Member
- Posts: 10636
- Joined: Sat Sep 09, 2006 4:16 pm
- Location: barony of vatavia,calontir, west of Wichita
- Contact:
Thomas Powers wrote:perhaps harvesting some of the rocks and piling them out of the yard...
does it look like a good crop this year?
Whenever the legislators endeavor to take away and destroy the property of the people, or to reduce them to slavery under arbitrary power, they put themselves into a state of war with the people, who are thereupon absolved from any further obedience
planishign balls
Get some Steel cannonballs on ebay, (i Pm that guy and bought an assortment instead of 5 of one size)(search 'steel cannon ball', that's the trick)
http://shop.ebay.com/i.html?_nkw=steel+ ... m270.l1313
buy some 1" black iron pipe nipples, and a 1" floor flange you will mount on your table.
Goto a uhaul where they install hitches, get them to weld it up, i bet if you get a couple it'll be less than $10 each for welding. 20 years ago I got my first helm top welded on that way for $6.
Or if you are in Ansteorra come over and I'll let you use my welder and learn how for free.
Cal-
http://shop.ebay.com/i.html?_nkw=steel+ ... m270.l1313
buy some 1" black iron pipe nipples, and a 1" floor flange you will mount on your table.
Goto a uhaul where they install hitches, get them to weld it up, i bet if you get a couple it'll be less than $10 each for welding. 20 years ago I got my first helm top welded on that way for $6.
Or if you are in Ansteorra come over and I'll let you use my welder and learn how for free.
Cal-
-
Thomas Powers
- Archive Member
- Posts: 13112
- Joined: Fri Aug 11, 2000 1:01 am
- Location: Socorro, New Mexico
Wow what a great scam! He probably buys the mill balls for scrap price and then *voila*
has "repro" cannon balls for 10 times as much! There was a fellow selling mill balls at a fleamarket once for US$1 a piece and three tables down a fellow was selling the same ones as ACW cannon balls for $10 a piece---he wasn't real happy when I pointed out they were not a sized used in American civil war cannons and so he was breaking the law selling them as such...
Cannon balls don't have "flats" on them and were cast iron not hardened steel.
Taking the ongoing discussion with "B" to pm....
Thomas
has "repro" cannon balls for 10 times as much! There was a fellow selling mill balls at a fleamarket once for US$1 a piece and three tables down a fellow was selling the same ones as ACW cannon balls for $10 a piece---he wasn't real happy when I pointed out they were not a sized used in American civil war cannons and so he was breaking the law selling them as such...
Cannon balls don't have "flats" on them and were cast iron not hardened steel.
Taking the ongoing discussion with "B" to pm....
Thomas
True, but I'm lazy
so getting 2 of each size, shipped to my door for $40+ was a pretty good deal.
I KNEW they were not cannonballs, but i have yet to find anyone who'll seem be grinding balls in 1s and 2s online.
So one purchase, a trip to Home depot and a chance to play with my brand new tig welder and I went from no planishing balls on stakes to enough to
give some away to my friends.
Cal..
so getting 2 of each size, shipped to my door for $40+ was a pretty good deal.
I KNEW they were not cannonballs, but i have yet to find anyone who'll seem be grinding balls in 1s and 2s online.
So one purchase, a trip to Home depot and a chance to play with my brand new tig welder and I went from no planishing balls on stakes to enough to
give some away to my friends.
Cal..
-
Konstantin the Red
- Archive Member
- Posts: 26713
- Joined: Sun Oct 21, 2001 1:01 am
- Location: Port Hueneme CA USA
-
Konstantin the Red
- Archive Member
- Posts: 26713
- Joined: Sun Oct 21, 2001 1:01 am
- Location: Port Hueneme CA USA
T. Pow. wrote:He probably buys the mill balls for scrap price and then *voila* has "repro" cannon balls for 10 times as much! There was a fellow selling mill balls at a fleamarket once for US$1 a piece and three tables down a felon was selling the same ones as ACW cannon balls for $10 a piece---he wasn't real happy when I pointed out they were not a sized used in American civil war cannons and so he was breaking the law selling them as such...
Tweaked it for ya... tweaked? Twoke? Twuck?
- fghthty545y
- Archive Member
- Posts: 1133
- Joined: Tue Jun 22, 2010 9:09 am
- Location: San Diego
InsaneIrish wrote:You might try finishing and polishing a railroad spike, then clamp that into a vise. I believe Halberds does that for his Newbie armouring tool kit.
I've had a railroad spike forever, though it's only slightly round. Would it be able to planish as is, you thinki? (I know if I try to file it I'll make it even flatter.)
I think the trailer ball bolted to your work table, with the flat on the top rounded off would serve you better than a railroad spike. if you're good/lucky you might be able to find an older hitch ball, that didn't have the flat top.
a railroad bolt(which has a round head) might work, but it pretty tight for planishing.
depending on where you live, it might be easier to find a mill ball than the grinding on the hitch ball.
a railroad bolt(which has a round head) might work, but it pretty tight for planishing.
depending on where you live, it might be easier to find a mill ball than the grinding on the hitch ball.
- sha-ul
- Archive Member
- Posts: 10636
- Joined: Sat Sep 09, 2006 4:16 pm
- Location: barony of vatavia,calontir, west of Wichita
- Contact:
dartaghan wrote:I know I would avoid having mine planished, so the answer is "no".
if they are going to start smacking them with a hammer, I yield

Whenever the legislators endeavor to take away and destroy the property of the people, or to reduce them to slavery under arbitrary power, they put themselves into a state of war with the people, who are thereupon absolved from any further obedience
- fghthty545y
- Archive Member
- Posts: 1133
- Joined: Tue Jun 22, 2010 9:09 am
- Location: San Diego
- The Iron Dwarf
- Archive Member
- Posts: 5114
- Joined: Tue Dec 23, 2008 6:45 am
- Location: Merry Olde England
I sell ball bearings, they are smooth and very hard, I also weld them onto stakes but the shipping to you would cost a lot
forges, stake plates, tools and lots more
want to join ebid? its free to join as a buyer
http://uk.ebid.net/buddy/52487
Nanus Ferreus
"you're even more devious than Aaron!" an anon forum poster!
want to join ebid? its free to join as a buyer
http://uk.ebid.net/buddy/52487
Nanus Ferreus
"you're even more devious than Aaron!" an anon forum poster!
- Johann Lederer
- Archive Member
- Posts: 2746
- Joined: Wed Mar 01, 2006 10:08 am
- Location: East Kingdom, PA
JoJo,
I bought my hitch balls at a local flea market. Usually (at least in my area) They cannot give the old ones away. I think the last time I bought a few in sizes from 1 7/8" to 3" (yeah an old mobile home hauler hitch ball) I paid $8 for the box of 6 or so. I kept what I wanted and passed the rest on to a budding metalsmith in our shire.
Old sledge hammers work well also, but if you hit the face with a hardened hammer face they may chip either the sledge or the hammer you are striking with. I also bought an old pick head and polished it. That makes a good creasing stake.
Railroad spikes galore...Hal's older posts on RR spikes got me to make a lot of different small stakes and I use them all the time...
My 4" ball stake is a andiron ball (fireplace log holder top) that I filled with crap lead and while it was hot put a pipe nipple in it. definitely works well...
I bought my hitch balls at a local flea market. Usually (at least in my area) They cannot give the old ones away. I think the last time I bought a few in sizes from 1 7/8" to 3" (yeah an old mobile home hauler hitch ball) I paid $8 for the box of 6 or so. I kept what I wanted and passed the rest on to a budding metalsmith in our shire.
Old sledge hammers work well also, but if you hit the face with a hardened hammer face they may chip either the sledge or the hammer you are striking with. I also bought an old pick head and polished it. That makes a good creasing stake.
Railroad spikes galore...Hal's older posts on RR spikes got me to make a lot of different small stakes and I use them all the time...
My 4" ball stake is a andiron ball (fireplace log holder top) that I filled with crap lead and while it was hot put a pipe nipple in it. definitely works well...
A PROUD member of the Ye Olde Mead Hovel
-
Thomas Powers
- Archive Member
- Posts: 13112
- Joined: Fri Aug 11, 2000 1:01 am
- Location: Socorro, New Mexico
One trick with trailer hitch balls that some folk use is to cut them off their short neck nd then flip them over and weld the flat spot to a longer, larger piece of steel and then dressing the cut part to round---easier to do with a piece that sticks up too far than one that is recessed!
Me I just pick up any round topped hitch ball when I can find them for a dollar or two.
The junk dealers at the local fleamarket know that I'm a sucker for dollar items!
Thomas
Me I just pick up any round topped hitch ball when I can find them for a dollar or two.
The junk dealers at the local fleamarket know that I'm a sucker for dollar items!
Thomas
-
Kase Villand
- Archive Member
- Posts: 202
- Joined: Wed Jun 08, 2005 8:01 am
To the original poster - the trouble with the billiard balls is that they'll shatter. Not the first time, but it won't take long. Wood has more "give" to it, so while they'll deform pretty fast, they won't turn into powder. Same thing for steel.
You can use the bowling ball, but since it'll "squish" just a little, you'll have to be really careful. Using a ground-down railroad spike is a good solution, but Halberds has a pretty fair price for his tools, too. Just looking over the pictures of tools he's made will have you thinking "oh, THATS how you get that shape..."
Good luck!
Kase
You can use the bowling ball, but since it'll "squish" just a little, you'll have to be really careful. Using a ground-down railroad spike is a good solution, but Halberds has a pretty fair price for his tools, too. Just looking over the pictures of tools he's made will have you thinking "oh, THATS how you get that shape..."
Good luck!
Kase
-
CLANG
- Archive Member
- Posts: 1262
- Joined: Thu Aug 24, 2000 1:01 am
- Location: Tornado, WV, USA
- Contact:
These are pretty inexpensive, and they offer to ship them together in a flat-rate box. Search this seller for "shot put":
http://shop.ebay.com/staglaneprimitives ... ksid=p4340
They're cast iron, so you can't weld to them (easily, anyway), but there are 3 different sizes for a total of ~ $25 + s/h.
Nesting them in the end of a suitably-sized piece of pipe would make an expedient, if not great, holder.
http://shop.ebay.com/staglaneprimitives ... ksid=p4340
They're cast iron, so you can't weld to them (easily, anyway), but there are 3 different sizes for a total of ~ $25 + s/h.
Nesting them in the end of a suitably-sized piece of pipe would make an expedient, if not great, holder.
Shot putt welded onto the end of a 3' section of 1" iron pipe.
Shot putt cost me $20, pipe cost about $3... and the welding was like $5 at a local welding shop.
I stressed to teh welder that it had to be hard core, because I would be shaping metal with it.
9 years later, and its still holding up strong.
Shot putt cost me $20, pipe cost about $3... and the welding was like $5 at a local welding shop.
I stressed to teh welder that it had to be hard core, because I would be shaping metal with it.
9 years later, and its still holding up strong.
dulce periculum
