Unique anvil-stake
- Chuck Davis
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- Location: Minneapolis, MN, USA
Unique anvil-stake
Check this out on eBay
http://cgi.ebay.com/aw-cgi/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=1134156216
An anvil-stake with a 34 inch leg similar to a leg vice.
-Cad
http://cgi.ebay.com/aw-cgi/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=1134156216
An anvil-stake with a 34 inch leg similar to a leg vice.
-Cad
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Brandr hinn Rusli
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- Location: Ontario, Canada
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David Hagler
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Dunno. For the price it's already at, you could probably find a regular post vice and a smaller stake.
The post vice would be much more versatile and shorter stakes less cumbersome.
But that's just me, I guess.
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Lochlainn
I'm a Liberal and I'm OK!
*Insert gratuitous inflammatory remark here*
The post vice would be much more versatile and shorter stakes less cumbersome.
But that's just me, I guess.
------------------
Lochlainn
I'm a Liberal and I'm OK!
*Insert gratuitous inflammatory remark here*
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Anradan MacEwan
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- Posts: 431
- Joined: Thu Aug 10, 2000 1:01 am
- Location: Humboldt, SK, Canada
That is a "T-Stake anvil". a very useful item when raising deep dishes in helm etc.
Have a look at how Eric Thing can take a single oval shaped disc and raise a helm out of it in one piece. He does Barbutes, sallets, bascinets, and simple conicals like this.
http://www.anvilfire.com/21centbs/armor/index.htm
Pretty neat I think.
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I hope that you will...
Farewell
Anradan
Have a look at how Eric Thing can take a single oval shaped disc and raise a helm out of it in one piece. He does Barbutes, sallets, bascinets, and simple conicals like this.
http://www.anvilfire.com/21centbs/armor/index.htm
Pretty neat I think.
------------------
I hope that you will...
Farewell
Anradan
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Brandr hinn Rusli
- Archive Member
- Posts: 472
- Joined: Thu Aug 10, 2000 1:01 am
- Location: Ontario, Canada
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Anradan MacEwan
- Archive Member
- Posts: 431
- Joined: Thu Aug 10, 2000 1:01 am
- Location: Humboldt, SK, Canada
- Sasha
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- Posts: 9362
- Joined: Mon Sep 18, 2000 1:01 am
- Location: State of permanent bemusement
It is a hoop makers anvil.
the stake allows you to forge-weld a hoop closed for making carriage wheel-rims and barell-hoops.
...at least that is what john (the smith I apprenticed to) used his for at the Cooperage in Bundeburg.
This tool would not be useful for raising and I cannot think of many uses for it in an armouring workshop like mine.
It is basically a 20kg anvil-on-a-stick (complete with pritchard holes). The stake gets anchoured in a stake-plate at ground level and you can move it around pretty easily.
I once noticed that the floors of an english carriage house were made of square plates of steel with square holes iin them that woudl allow stakes to get anchored in literally hundreds of places around the room.
So you can set up the portable repair gear up around the broken carriage rather then need to carry the carriiage to the workshop.
(not sure that is quite what those holes were for, but it seems likely)
Sasha
the stake allows you to forge-weld a hoop closed for making carriage wheel-rims and barell-hoops.
...at least that is what john (the smith I apprenticed to) used his for at the Cooperage in Bundeburg.
This tool would not be useful for raising and I cannot think of many uses for it in an armouring workshop like mine.
It is basically a 20kg anvil-on-a-stick (complete with pritchard holes). The stake gets anchoured in a stake-plate at ground level and you can move it around pretty easily.
I once noticed that the floors of an english carriage house were made of square plates of steel with square holes iin them that woudl allow stakes to get anchored in literally hundreds of places around the room.
So you can set up the portable repair gear up around the broken carriage rather then need to carry the carriiage to the workshop.
(not sure that is quite what those holes were for, but it seems likely)
Sasha

