Making a Propane Forge II
Wednesday, July 7th, 2010 at
9:02 pm
A second view of the propane forge in the making. Tim thanks all of his virtual compatriots for forge making info found on the web
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Tagged with: artshed • blacksmith • Hillsboro • metal • Oregon • shop
Filed under: Furnace
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wow thats ace well done you could make them and sell them on ebay and make some good money with them and u could use the money to make you work shed biger with more tools
nice, i made a similar one but with a t-rex burner from hybrid burners yours looks far more proffesional though.
could you melt aluminum in it in a crucible?
Where did you get the insulation, and what were the dimensions of the whole thing?
Very cool!!!!!
Supplement/replace the gas with waste oil?
Nice forge how did you make the idle Jet idea work,you will have many hours of forging there.
Very nice!
Just wondering where one can get fire brick? -is it sold at local Home Depot type stores, or do you have to order it?
BEWARE THE DRAGON’S BREATH !!!
-The plume of invisible flame which jets forth from the opening of gas forges.
E bay is the cheapest place to get fire brick. Good luck.
Are you sure air compressor tanks aren’t galvanized?
yes, most are not
You really MUST seal that ceramic blanket with satanite or rutlands. If you dont, you will be filling your shop and lungs with asbestos-like fibers when it comes to heat. Trust me, I am a bladesmith, it is a serious hazard. Coat with satanite and then Kast-o-lite for durability and then itc-100 to make really efficient. You can skip the last two if you don’t weld with borax flux.
Yes, you are correct. I forgot to mention that I was going to coat the kaowool with ITC-100. Thanks for catching that. I will add a note at the end of the video to do that.
where do you get the insulation from? basically what kind of store?