News:

"Do you not know that a man is not dead while his name is still spoken?" - Terry Pratchett, Going Postal

Main Menu

repaired No 7

Started by jimwrench, July 05, 2014, 10:42:36 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

bear_man

Golly!  This conversation reminds me of when I kept attending auctions in hopes of acquiring an anvil.  I kept being outbid — until, that is, one came up for auction that it appeared someone had "blown" for a 4th of July celebration, or something, and welded back together.  (Apparently it was fairly common to stack one anvil atop another with black powder between the two and light the powder off.)  This anvil had been broken in half through the "waist."  I wandered around, found a hammer, went back to the anvil and played on the "face" for awhile.  It seemed fine to me, so I bid on it and got a ca. 110 lb. anvil for under $50.  It has served me well ever since.  That was 12 years ago.
     If I NEEDED a #7 jointer plane (which I don't), I doubt I would resist using that one.  And while I buy nothing to mount on the wall or plant geraniums in, I'd also be sorely tempted with that beauty — I, too, would've acquired it simply because of the love and so on exhibited by the person who restored it.  "Right On," as some of us said in the olde days.

warren toronto

I think that's incredibly cool.   I dream of running into something like this at a garage sale.

Warren

Bill Houghton

Quote from: bear_man on July 11, 2014, 02:20:19 AM"Right On," as some of us said in the olde days.
Or, as one of my bosses used to say*, "Right Arm!"

*while pumping his right hand vigorously in the air.

wrenchguy

i would've tried to buy because 2 me it looked, been repaired back in the day.  like the time spent on this spoke pointer,



post about it from a year ago.
http://www.papawswrench.com/vboard/index.php?topic=9285.msg58376#msg58376

Branson

Quote from: bear_man on July 11, 2014, 02:20:19 AM
... until, that is, one came up for auction that it appeared someone had "blown" for a 4th of July celebration, or something, and welded back together.  (Apparently it was fairly common to stack one anvil atop another with black powder between the two and light the powder off.) 

Gregson, one of Sutter's blacksmiths circa 1846, blew his anvil every 4th of July.  (Ironically,  we aren't allowed to use that anvil -- using it in the blacksmith's shop might damage it...)