![]() ![]() Were you to buy a Trenton, Peter Wright, or Hay Budden, you're buying an anvil that has a wrought iron body and a tool steel face welded on. In the case of Fisher Norris anvils, the tool steel face plate covers the entire top, including the top of the horn. If folks then had known what a mint condition anvil was going for today. Break an anvil, go to the store and get another. ![]() Of course, back then the anvil was seen simply as another rather easily replaced tool. This happens across the spectrum, on anvils that have both wrought iron bodies and cast iron bodies. You will see anvils that have the face plate broken off in places, but this is the result either of a manufacturing defect or serious abuse. Only the top surface saw any real "abuse", so only the top surface needed to be the more expensive, but durable, quality steel. In olden days, anvils were made of lesser-quality metal for the majority of their body because the lesser quality of metal was easier to make, thus cheaper, and would stand up to the use it was under. ![]() The fisher anvil, however, is a chunk of cast iron with a tool steel plate welded onto the top. At this point the question becomes, "Is this a museum piece?" and "Should I be pounding on a museum piece?" Tough questions that even museum curators fight over.ND, cast iron anvils like you can buy from Grizzly are just that - solid chunks of cast iron. They are better than no anvil at all and generally better than railroad track anvils. It is common on very old anvils with thin steel faces for peices of the face to break off or get worn through.īroken worn out anvils have their uses and thus have some monetary value. When any part breaks off the anvil without undue abuse (ALL anvils are abused to some degree). When the face starts showing a fine pattern of stress cracks. When is an anvil "worn out?" When the face starts to get sway backed to the point you don't need a straight edge to tell. Bigger anvils generally sell for more per pound due to their rarity. Because small 100-130# anvils are very common they sell for less. For general work an anvil of 200 lbs or more is needed. A serious blacksmith will wear out a small anvil in a short time (a year or less). The London pattern anvil with less horn and heal in the same weight class is OK for light general work. The advantage of these small anvils is portability. Many people (including myself) classify small 90-125# American pattern anvils as farriers anvils. They are a light duty device for adjustment and modification of factory made shoes. Modern farriers anvils with the very long horn and heal, narrow waist and arched base are not suitable for general blacksmithing NOR manufacturing horseshoes. An other wise good anvil rings less or not at all if it is cracked (a hard call). Taping the horn or heal from the side will make an anvil ring more than when struck on the face. range will ring enough to hurt the ears while large anvils in the 300 lb range generally ring less. An anvil that is clamped or bolted down dosn't ring very well. Good anvils ring when struck depending on how they are mounted. A good anvil has quick rebound when struck with a hard hammer. Cast iron anvils are junk and not worth the metal it took to make them. Good anvils have wrought iron or steel bodies and a hard steel face. Anvils in good condition don't have cracks or big chunks missing. When buying and using old anvils you have to overlook a lot of little chips and dings. The trick is knowing a good anvil from a bad anvil. New anvils sell for $5 to $6 a pound and there is some question as to the quality sometimes. I've also been given anvils for free (twice!) and have sold anvils for as much as 2.25/lb. I've been lucky and bought some realy nice anvils at a little less than $1/lb. It all depends on who's buying and who's selling. In the 1960's the rule of thumb was $1/lb. Used anvils vary in price from 25 cents to 3 dollars a pound. ANVILS-2 Buying used anvils From a post on the Blacksmiths Junkyard 1997. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |