Well this morning I went and picked up some material for my bigger die and for another setup I wanted to try, first i fixed my floppy punch situation with 5 rosette welds in the punch plate, this just keeps the laminations from opening up when the set screws are tightened

Then i used a piece of 1/2 flatbar to make this punch, i know its not pretty but the clock is running out

Then I bent the bottom of my new syrup pan, I was racking my brain how to make all of these acute bends and the only thing i could think of was to pre bend to 90 first

After that i switched to my new die that is basically just a long square opening and bend them all down to 30ish degrees


So this is the floor of my new syrup pan, my old one is a flat bottom pan and the 15x32 pan has a surface area of 480 sq. inches. The new pan with all of the folds essentially uses 48" of material in the same 15" width so that much more surface area for fire to hit and boil the sap, not sure if it will boil 3x as much but it should ramp up production a bit

Then i used a piece of 1/2 flatbar to make this punch, i know its not pretty but the clock is running out

Then I bent the bottom of my new syrup pan, I was racking my brain how to make all of these acute bends and the only thing i could think of was to pre bend to 90 first

After that i switched to my new die that is basically just a long square opening and bend them all down to 30ish degrees


So this is the floor of my new syrup pan, my old one is a flat bottom pan and the 15x32 pan has a surface area of 480 sq. inches. The new pan with all of the folds essentially uses 48" of material in the same 15" width so that much more surface area for fire to hit and boil the sap, not sure if it will boil 3x as much but it should ramp up production a bit
as a cold blooded canadian it is just second nature but im sure there are a lot of southerners that have never seen the process





