So I have this...I dunno Anvil What is it?

This forum is designed to help us spread the knowledge of armouring.
Post Reply
User avatar
Sir Thorfinn
Archive Member
Posts: 802
Joined: Thu Jun 03, 2004 1:24 pm
Location: Cincinnati, Ohio
Contact:

So I have this...I dunno Anvil What is it?

Post by Sir Thorfinn »

Hi All,
I have had this beast knocking around in my garage for a decade or so, and am looking to define just what it is, and what it may be worth.
Any clues would be helpful.
My best guess is it's about 30 lbs.
I have better resolution pics, but don't want to eat significant bandwidth.
It's patinated with rust, needs refinished to be a perfect whupping surface, but I always used it wrapped in junk leather of canvas, and it was fine.
I saw one of these new once, and it was a beautiful thing, and stoopidly expensive, like 600+, I got this one at auction for far less.
I was told it was some kind of Farriers stake.

Any Ideas?

Sir Thorfinn
Attachments
0906091528.jpg
0906091528.jpg (22.43 KiB) Viewed 540 times
0906091528a.jpg
0906091528a.jpg (25.27 KiB) Viewed 540 times
0906091529.jpg
0906091529.jpg (26.31 KiB) Viewed 540 times
User avatar
Old_bear
Archive Member
Posts: 292
Joined: Fri Aug 01, 2003 1:01 am
Location: Milwaukee, WI, USA
Contact:

Post by Old_bear »

It's called a bickhorn stake. Probably made by Pexto by the look of it. It's a classic sheet metal stake. Very handy for most of what we do. It looks a very nice version of itself - appears to be forged , not cast. Take some emery cloth to it and see what shape the horn, face and edges are in. They can go for a good chunk of change, but $600 is too much. Nice find.

Valerius
User avatar
Cap'n Atli
Archive Member
Posts: 7380
Joined: Wed Oct 04, 2000 1:01 am
Location: Oakley, Maryland, USA (in St. Mary's ["b'Gawd Cap'n..."] County)
Contact:

Post by Cap'n Atli »

Yep, it's a stake for tin and sheet metal working. I have one myself, mounted in its own stump. Very useful for up to 12 ga. sheet, and maybe beyond that (although at that point I usually work hot on my regular anvil.

Your classic bickhorn stake is pointed at both ends (a bick and a horn). This one has a nice square heel, useful for sheet metal corners.

I bought mine (after shopping and looking a couple of years) for ~$75 at a Blacksmiths' Guild of the Potomac tailgate.
Retired civil servant, part time blacksmith, and seasonal Viking ship captain.

Visit parks: http://www.nps.gov
Forge iron: http://www.anvilfire.com
Go viking: http://www.longshipco.org

"Fifty years abaft the mast."
User avatar
Pitbull Armory
Archive Member
Posts: 5312
Joined: Wed Dec 17, 2008 10:28 pm
Location: Out in the woods
Contact:

Hi there

Post by Pitbull Armory »

Hi there, Actually, A bick horn or bick iron, is always a smaller horn that mounts to your anvil or stump as far as ive ever seen. Theres an example of one at the base of the 350 lb anvil thats just to the left of the Beakhorn Stake. What you have there is a Beakhorn Stake, (Pexto 920?) about 40 inches long and about 50 lbs Im guessing. Its got a tapered bottom to use in a stake plate like this. A huge stump would be great also. I use mine alot for vambraces. I think those stakes make great anvils by themselves. How much did you get that one for? Usually they go on ebay for around 150-250.

Take care

Pitbull
Attachments
ashop.JPG
ashop.JPG (66.29 KiB) Viewed 365 times
ashop11.JPG
ashop11.JPG (55.38 KiB) Viewed 365 times
Last edited by Pitbull Armory on Mon Sep 07, 2009 3:17 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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
Kel Rekuta
Archive Member
Posts: 1587
Joined: Thu Apr 29, 2004 11:01 am
Location: Toronto Canada

Post by Kel Rekuta »

I just missed one for $125 CAD recently. $600 is waaay too much.
User avatar
Sir Thorfinn
Archive Member
Posts: 802
Joined: Thu Jun 03, 2004 1:24 pm
Location: Cincinnati, Ohio
Contact:

Post by Sir Thorfinn »

I may have mis-stated that, I saw one in a catalog years ago for about 600.....I got mine at an auction for about 100.00 I think. It's been a long time.
Mine is pretty pitted, but it look slike if I took an angle grinder to it, i could resurface it, assuming it's not like older anvils that have a case hardened exterior.
Does anyone know?

Plus, I'm pretty sick of looking at it, so want to sell it.

My concern is that shipping would kill any reasonable sale, because it does weigh in the 40-50 lb range.

It's a sweet stake, for the right armorer, but that guy isn't me...all teh stuff I do, I can do on my small RR anvil.
Konstantin the Red
Archive Member
Posts: 26713
Joined: Sun Oct 21, 2001 1:01 am
Location: Port Hueneme CA USA

Post by Konstantin the Red »

Well, Thorfinn, I wouldn't give up on the thing yet unless I needed a hundred bucks more than I needed the bick iron to make stuff I could sell for more than a hundred. It's like a rounded edition of your RR anvil and its tall T shape makes it excellent for seating rivets in helms: squared end reaches all the way in and backs those tinners' rivets right up.

Angle grind, or buff at it with suitable grits of emery cloth run over it like a shoeshine guy using a buffing cloth.
"The Minstrel Boy to the war is gone..."
User avatar
Sir Thorfinn
Archive Member
Posts: 802
Joined: Thu Jun 03, 2004 1:24 pm
Location: Cincinnati, Ohio
Contact:

Post by Sir Thorfinn »

That's just it...
I have this wonderful tool, and have not used, or needed to use it in 10 years...so I want to ultimately find a home for it...where it will get all the love and beatings it deserves.
It's funny, I have favorite ball stakes, oddball custom tools, and this thing I've used maybe 3 times, just because I could...
Seems a waste of a nice tool.
Plus, my new garage will cause it to rust like mad compared to where I used to live, I just can't store it properly.

So, anyone near Cincinnati interested?
:)
Destichado
Archive Member
Posts: 5623
Joined: Mon Oct 23, 2000 1:01 am

Post by Destichado »

Yup, sure am.

Where in Cincinnati are you?
Memento, homo, quod cinis es! Et in cenerem reverentis!
AndrescalledAJ
Archive Member
Posts: 164
Joined: Thu Jan 22, 2009 12:21 am
Location: Blackthornistan, Atlantia

Post by AndrescalledAJ »

How much do you want for it?
I live just in Athens and a good buddy of mine has a full 1860s forge at one of the colleges and could more than likely find a home for it.
I will send this to him.
Maybe if I feed them they wont hit so hard
User avatar
Baron Conal
Archive Member
Posts: 8656
Joined: Sun Feb 05, 2006 8:56 am
Location: Northern Kentucky
Contact:

Post by Baron Conal »

Destichado wrote:Yup, sure am.

Where in Cincinnati are you?


beat me to it.....
Baron Conal O'hAirt

Aude Aliquid Dignum Dare Something Worthy

“Each is given a bag of tools,
A shapeless mass,
A book of rules;
And each must make-
Ere life has flown-
A stumbling block
Or a stepping stone”

― R L Sharpe
Vermin
Archive Member
Posts: 3126
Joined: Wed Mar 28, 2001 2:01 am
Location: Tallahassee FL USA

Post by Vermin »

"I have this wonderful tool, and have not used, or needed to use it in 10 years"

But you HAVEN'T USED it....so how do you KNOW?:wink:

You just didn't know you needed to use it, that's all!
(Guilty of the same thing myself from time to time!)
Mess with it, you'll love it.
We had on in a shop I worked in, and I miss that thing.
"As far as setting down a drinking horn, historical records show that proper Viking etiquette was to simply jam the pointy end into the nearest non-Germanic person should one need his hands free...
y'know, if you had to pee....."
Signo
Archive Member
Posts: 4963
Joined: Thu Jul 25, 2002 1:01 am
Location: Italy
Contact:

Post by Signo »

Never heard of nobody wanting to sell such stakes.. I had to have someone make one for me... Start using it.
Thomas Powers
Archive Member
Posts: 13112
Joined: Fri Aug 11, 2000 1:01 am
Location: Socorro, New Mexico

Post by Thomas Powers »

Take it to Quad-State and throw it on a table with a money can next to it!

I picked up mine in a pawnshop in OK back in the early 1980's for $25; but it wasn't rusty...

I mainly use it to form penannular brooches on.
Destichado
Archive Member
Posts: 5623
Joined: Mon Oct 23, 2000 1:01 am

Post by Destichado »

The good Baron and I are both locals. (How's the forging going, btw?)

Honestly I could make my own, it's just that at your asking price I'd be foolish to try. If another needs it more than I, he's more than welcome to it.
Memento, homo, quod cinis es! Et in cenerem reverentis!
ARMOURER ERIC
Archive Member
Posts: 5060
Joined: Fri Aug 11, 2000 1:01 am
Location: Boulevard CA USA
Contact:

Post by ARMOURER ERIC »

I see them on ebay frequently, usually sell around $250.
Eric Joseph
James River Armory
http://www.medievaltownsquare.com Break the evil shackles of Ebay!! Always find my items at the best on-line price here!
Ebid-For buying my items overseas!
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm3098240/
User avatar
mordreth
Archive Member
Posts: 21803
Joined: Sat Dec 22, 2001 2:01 am
Location: Levittown, NY

Post by mordreth »

Sir Thorfinn wrote:That's just it...
I have this wonderful tool, and have not used, or needed to use it in 10 years...so I want to ultimately find a home for it...where it will get all the love and beatings it deserves.
It's funny, I have favorite ball stakes, oddball custom tools, and this thing I've used maybe 3 times, just because I could...
Seems a waste of a nice tool.
Plus, my new garage will cause it to rust like mad compared to where I used to live, I just can't store it properly.

So, anyone near Cincinnati interested?
:)


spray it down with break free, let it sit for a couple of days and take a fine wire wheel to it - damn good tool
Sweat in the tiltyard, or bleed on the field.
Post Reply