Blacksmithing 101 - How To Make A Forge and Start Hammering Metal - Popular Mechanics

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Homepage / Home How-To / Projects & Plans / Metalworking / Blacksmithing 101: How to Make a Forge and
Start Hammering Metal
BY ROY BERENDSOHN
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Blacksmithing 101: How to Make a Forge
and Start Hammering Metal
PM's home and auto editors took a weekend out to teach themselves how to heat and hammer
metal the old-fashioned way. They started by ordering an anvil and making their own blacksmith
forge. The sparks flew from there. Click here to download an updated version of the forge plans
published in Popular Mechanics in 1941.
February 13, 2009 12:00 AM
What We Used /// Ridgid Peddinghaus Model 12
anvil: Strike hot metal on this 275-pound anvil and it
rings like a bell.
PM editors Roy Berendsohn (left) and Mike Allen
(right) have framed houses and built race
cars--but forge steel in the garage? That was
something new.
If you want to work with metal, there's one thing you have to confront: You need heat. With it, you can make the
toughest metal submit to your will. Without it, you'll never gain full mastery over this stubborn material.
Over the years, I have been frustrated by my inability to work hot steel. I've bolted metal together, welded it and soldered
it. But I couldn't shape it, and so large swaths of the mechanical realm were off-limits to me.
But blacksmithing never felt alien. My father is a metallurgist, descended from generations of 19th-century blacksmiths
and born in Germany to shipbuilders whose forges scattered sparks over the shores of the Elbe River and the North
Sea. I grew up in rural Connecticut among Yankee mechanics who could forge anything, machine anything, build
anything, fix anything--and I've been trying to live up to those old-timers' standards all my life. It wasn't hard to finally
decide to take another step, and teach myself some blacksmithing skills.
Building the Forge
Maybe it's because our smokestack industries are in decline that a rising number of Americans feel the need to get their
metalworking fix in home workshops. The Artist-Blacksmith's Association of North America counts a membership of 4000
hobbyists and professionals. Some people estimate there are more blacksmiths in this country today than there were
during the 1800s. And you don't have to poke around long to find dozens of Web sites offering friendly--even
passionate--advice from artisans, along with equipment ranging from anvils and tongs to air-driven power hammers.
First, I needed a forge. I considered buying a gas-powered model, but the fact was that I wanted to build my own. So I
settled on a design that can be executed in an afternoon using parts purchased at a home center, a masonry supply yard
and an auto parts store. The forge would burn coal, rather than gas, to make things simpler. And the design had another
virtue, at least as far as I was concerned. It was based on plans published in Popular Mechanics in July 1941.
I enlisted the help of Mike Allen, our senior auto editor and a crack metalworker. He glanced at the old plans and said,
"Sure, we can build this." Within days, Mike's house and the shop behind it swirled with activity as the UPS guy delivered
in rapid succession a 275-pound anvil, tools, materials and four 50-pound boxes of blacksmith's coal shipped from
Pennsylvania.
Once the supplies were in, we set to work building the forge, beginning with its stand. I cut steel parts and handed them
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off to Mike, who laid them out on the shop floor, clamped them together and temporarily tack-welded them with small
globs of steel.
With the stand tacked, he flipped up his mask and handed me the welding gun: "You take it from here." I slid on a mask
and picked up where he'd left off. As I worked, Mike crouched over my shoulder and fired off bits of advice. "Get more
weld metal on the vertical surfaces," he said. "You're getting too much spatter; reduce your travel speed and your
electrode stick-out." When I found it difficult to see through the welding glare and smoke, he said, "Deal with it. Look at
the weld puddle, not the arc." I learned more about welding in that half hour than I had in years of fooling around on my
own.
After we completed the stand, we riveted sheetmetal into a hood and fashioned a chimney from a 5-ft piece of
stovepipe. Then, we troweled refractory cement (the kind used in furnaces and kilns) into the sink. We ran steel and PVC
pipe from the drain to the output port on a shop vacuum. The same line would supply air both to the sink (to feed the fire)
and, through a Y joint, to another pipe leading into the chimney (to help pull the smoke up and away). We installed a
valve to let us direct the air where we wanted it. We also cut pressure-treated 4 x 4 lumber to make a block for the anvil,
then hoisted the anvil onto the block using a tow strap hooked to a ceiling-mounted electric winch. Finally, we hammered
1/8-in.-thick steel flat stock into straps to attach the anvil to its block. Believe me, 15 minutes spent pounding cold steel
can convince anybody of the need for a forge.
Now we just had to let the furnace cement cure overnight.
Forge: A two-basin stainless-steel sink serves as
the center of our blacksmithing setup. One basin is
filled with water, forming a quench tank. The other
is lined with furnace cement, then covered with
firebricks laid in place without mortar. A cast-iron
floor-drain cover laid over the sink's drain forms the
tuyre, the port where a blast of air (supplied by a
shop vacuum) enters the coal bed from below.
Refractory Cement, Brick: Rutland Fire Clay
Black Furnace Cement was troweled into the sink
to protect it. Firebrick is sold at masonry centers.
Forge Fuel: Penn Keystone Coal sells clean-
burning bituminous and anthracite blacksmith's
coal in 50-pound bags protected by a cardboard
box. One pound offers an astonishing 14,373
Btu.
Hood and Vent: Twenty-gauge sheetmetal
and a 5-in. galvanized stovepipe formed the
forge's hood and vent. The materials are
commonly available at home centers.
Firing the Coal
I arrived at Mike's shop early next morning to find him puttering around, a cup of coffee in hand and another, recently
poured, waiting for me on the workbench. "Ready for fire?" he asked.
We carried the forge outside and in a light autumn wind used a propane torch to ignite crumbled shipping paper and
kindling split from the pallet the anvil was shipped on. When the fire was bright and hot, we coaxed some coal onto it,
and watched anxiously as it gave off a faint, yellow-green, sulfurous smoke. We added more fuel. The fire smoldered
stubbornly, but when we turned on our high-powered vacuum, the blast of air knocked our little coal pile out of position.
We pushed the smoldering pieces back with a steel bar and tried again, without success.
Mike grabbed an air hose and nozzle from his shop compressor and applied a gentle draft. Now the coal started to glow.
We added more fuel, and the smoke nearly disappeared. We turned on the shop vacuum again. With that, an impressive
rushing sound came up from the forge, and the center of the coal mound reddened like a stoplight. A few moments later,
a bright yellow flame jumped from the fuel, and then a ghostly blue glow took shape above it. As it hovered, the blue light
looked like a living thing.
Once the coal was burning well on its own, I took a piece of scrap metal from the shop floor and wiggled the steel into the
volcanic fuel bed. A couple of minutes later, we slid the metal out to find that it had merely turned a light shade of
blue--still not enough heat. Mike rotated the valve to make the vacuum's entire air output rush into the fire, feeding the
flames. (This is where the old blacksmithing term "full blast" comes from.) We watched in awe as a yellow-white glow
took shape in the center of the coal, and the steel was lost in the glare. The light was too intense to look at without
shaded eye protection.
Working the Steel
A couple of minutes later, I picked up my tongs and withdrew the steel. The end was now glowing bright yellow and
spitting sparks--the temperature must have been up around 1900 F. I laid the metal over the anvil's edge and picked up
our 48-ounce blacksmith hammer. A few whacks were all it took to put a neat bend in the bar.
After decades spent struggling with hacksaws and rivet guns, I can't tell you how gratifying it was to put a hammer to
glowing steel and bend it like putty. Mechanical justice was done.
A long day followed as Mike and I practiced the basics of the blacksmith's age-old craft: bending, flattening, twisting,
tapering and upsetting--striking a bar to thicken and enlarge its hot end. We used angle iron to form the best
coal-handling tool I've seen--a curved fire poker worthy of a shipyard's smithing shop. And we felt sufficiently emboldened
to try our hand at forging a demolition chisel from a 3/4-in.-dia bar of tool steel, a high-carbon material far tougher than
the stuff found at hardware stores. We had to let the steel soak in the forge fire three times and swing the hammer for
several minutes before it began to yield.
At sundown, we called it quits and let the fuel bed cool into ash. We swept the shop floor and put away our tools for the
night, already planning future projects. Teaching ourselves forge construction and basic blacksmithing in two days was a
good piece of work. But Mike had plans for a serpentine iron rack to store motorcycle helmets, while I wanted another go
at shaping my own tools, designed uniquely for my needs. That's how I imagine the Iron Age was launched in prehistory,
in a forge like the ones archaeologists have found scattered throughout Africa and the Middle East. Some guy needed a
better tool, and figured out a way to make one.
It was dark by the time I dropped into the seat of my car and headed home. As I merged onto the highway and into a
traffic jam, I saw the taillights of the cars ahead in a new way. Just for tonight, they didn't represent a hassle. They
looked like a gigantic bed of glowing coals, waiting for its steel.
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Basic Skills
Bending
Tongs: Wolf-jaw tongs are a general-purpose tool, and the best choice for beginning smiths.
Place hot metal over the horn to make a gracefully curved bend. To make a right-angle
bend, use the width of the anvil's face.
Twisting
Secure a heated bar in a vise and turn one end with a wrench. If you're twisting stock
with a rectangular cross section, place a short piece of pipe over the stock to prevent
distortion as you twist.
Upsetting
Heat the end of a bar and place its hot end down on the anvil's face or on the upsetting
block that projects from the base, if your anvil has one. Drive the bar into the anvil by
striking the cold end. This thickens the hot end, transforming it into a bulbous shape.
Flattening
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Striking Tools: Plumb's 48-ounce blacksmith hammer (seen here) is complemented by a 40-ounce
ball-peen hammer.
Lay the bar across the anvil's width to flatten its end. To straighten and flatten a bent bar,
lay it across the anvil at an angle.
Choosing steel
Low-carbon steel (top) is fine for most projects, but high-carbon, S7 tool steel (bottom) is
better for shaping implements that need to hold an edge.
Post a comment
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Add a comment 57 comments
Jonathan Severs
Learn blacksmithing at Ryedale Folk Museum 01751 417367 Sat 12th July 2014 http://
ryedalefolkmuseum.blogspot.co.uk/2014/07/anyone-want-to-learn-to-be-blacksmith.html
Reply Like Follow Post July 7 at 2:22pm
Braden Hodge Works at Phil Robertson "The Duck Commander"
The sink was cool u gave me a idea
Reply Like Follow Post February 13 at 2:25pm
Andrew Hile Sr.
and the sink they used was stainless steel not galvanized. so no risk
Reply Like Follow Post September 17, 2013 at 5:18pm
Mike Murray Keller, Texas
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xMuCId2Uo6U
Reply Like Follow Post June 3, 2013 at 9:04am
Follow
Todd Bragg Kingsport, Tennessee
yeah this is a great article. I only wish that I had the salary of a popular mechanics editor to buy the
necessary materials.
Reply Like Follow Post January 14, 2013 at 2:25pm
View 1 more
4
Matthew Bouck Ilion Junior - Senior High School
If you get creative you can follow there lead and pick up junk or used things to make it all
work, I see sinks in the garbage all the time, and you don't need a welder for the frame,
bolt it together, use your wife's hair dryer for forced air, charcoal instead of coal and any
thick piece of steel for the anvil. If you want to do something don't make excuses just do it.
If you really like it, over time set yourself up with better equipment.
Reply Like July 8, 2013 at 3:40pm 14
Kenny Bennett
Matthew Bouck you dont want to use charcoal because it has impurities in it that will cause
the metal to have a lower strength and tolerance.
Reply Like November 18, 2013 at 6:29pm 2
Avitus Xenoi Maintenance at Hotel
Kenny Bennett : yes, but if you're digging through scrap to put together a spartan forge,
use charcoal if you must to get started learning. Your first few tries will be for learning the
skills, play doh before clay. Strength and tolerance come in to play when you know how to
make what you're making.
Reply Like December 18, 2013 at 10:46pm 7
Zach Menz Tour Guide at Miller/Coors Brewery
With the stovepipe being galvanized, is there any chance of hazardous fumes?
Reply Like Follow Post January 31, 2013 at 11:53pm 3
Brandon Ayotte
Read this and already kinda learned a few things lol
Reply Like February 1, 2013 at 10:38am 1
Mark Laffranchi San Francisco, California
yes
Reply Like June 9, 2013 at 8:47am
Duane Dean Maintenance at Chula Vista
No. The vapor your talking about comes from welding and no stove is going to get that hot.
TIG welding can exceede 34,000 f, ARC is about 9,000 F. The stoves heat is probably
around 1400 F up to around 3400 F. but the hood sits about 2 foot above the forge itself so
the hood might get around a couple hundred degrees right above the fire.
Reply Like September 6, 2013 at 3:58pm
Robert Lominick Top Commenter Caretaker at I worked as an Xray tech, Now fulltime
caretaker.
I would love to get into blacksmithing.. I am looking into it and see how much it would cost to make a
small forge. It would not only be fun but may be profitable.
Reply Like Follow Post March 3, 2013 at 7:14pm
Follow
1
Katerina Rose Barry Cherryfield, Maine
beautifully written, great information and visual aid.
Reply Like Follow Post January 6, 2013 at 4:06pm 1
Mike Sebastian Jonestown, Pennsylvania
I have read all of your posts on here so I may seem to ramble, but I'm just filling in some of the
questions that were ask. I have been a farrier (lament terms blacksmith/ horse shoer) for better part of
20 years, I learned from my father, who at this point is one of the best shoers out there for his style of
shoeing and for what he has done for the Morgan horse world. So at this point I feel I have enough
background to add two or three cents. I learned using a coal forge, love that thing, it was an old steal
drum welded to a metal table and a large funnel top out the top of my fathers work truck (yes, he had
a truck that carried his shop). Coal is probable the best way to heat metal (and if anyone has worked
with it, then they already know what its like to pull out a bar and finding it spattering hot steal
everywhere (looks lik... See More
Reply Like Follow Post October 16, 2012 at 3:48pm 1
Trent Wilson OWATC
I love knowing that I can make a forge from easy enough to find materials, though I do not know
anything about welding. It has always been my dream to make swords as a hobby I know there is a lot
to learn but I want to make this one dream a reality. I need to ask though what would the Approximate
cost of the materials, and would there be a way I can get a general blueprint, so I can build one on my
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