OverkillYJ
Well-known member
Turd anvil is the nice way to put it.
So I picked up for $50 a 55lb cast anvil. I have broken two vices already, one of them a fairly nice one that pissed me off. That happened yesterday. So today I ran out for this piece of ****. I knew what I was buying from the start, but I have a good amount of thick steel on hand.
Its not for knife forging or anything crazy. I hit it with a ball peen and it mars with just a tap. That soft cast ****. I need it for hammering on auto parts I remanufacture in my spare time. Basically heavy **** rusted together that would normally go to scrap, I make like new for older vehicles. I have torches and everything I use to break rust, chem baths, but sometimes we all know it just needs a BFH to get things to separate which is what has screwed up two of my vices.
So I was thinking of taking a 3/8 or 1/2 piece of Steel and welding it to the top. I have welded cast before with success. I figured i could cut the steel shape for the face out with my plasma cutter, drill some holes for deep welds into the existing face, then heat and quench my new face after cutting it before welding it on. I have everything on hand to do it for free, just not sure it is the best approach. I was thinking on the anvil itself I may want to drill down where I put the holes for welding the face on so when I fill it with metal it anchors in properly. Maybe like 3/4" deep holes with 7/16 bolts tapped in so the welds can anchor in nicely.
I have been anvil shopping on Craigslist for a year now. Bottom line is, I cant find what I need. Someone beats me to every good deal that pops up. At minumum I cant find anything I would actually spend the money on for under $500. I have too many other things on my list before a proper anvil. I do not have a forge to start. Any hot work I do is just oxy acetylene using a couple large tanks I have. I dont need to be able to hit that stuff on this, but I would like to be able to if I did for some odd job.
I also have quite a bit of 1/8" and 3/16" mild steel plate laying around. I was not sure if layering a steel base to weld the new face to may be the longest lasting option.
If anyone has tried this, let me know how it worked out for you please. Like I said, for what I need, it will do perfectly fine the way it sits. I would like a decent face though that doesnt marr with every tap if I can.
Also, I would be MIG welding this with a Millermatic 211, 75/25 mig mix gas, and er70s-6. In the past, when pre heating and cooling cast welds, I found my 200k BTU torpedo heater does the job quite well. For cooling I just slowly pull it further away and have never had any problems with cracking.
I figure this would take me a couple hours, and be nice if it comes out solid. The metal I have is scrap otherwise. I know it is no replacement for the real deal, but if it gets me by for a year I am happy. I really was not 100% sure if I should harden the steel or not either if I do go forward with this.
So I picked up for $50 a 55lb cast anvil. I have broken two vices already, one of them a fairly nice one that pissed me off. That happened yesterday. So today I ran out for this piece of ****. I knew what I was buying from the start, but I have a good amount of thick steel on hand.
Its not for knife forging or anything crazy. I hit it with a ball peen and it mars with just a tap. That soft cast ****. I need it for hammering on auto parts I remanufacture in my spare time. Basically heavy **** rusted together that would normally go to scrap, I make like new for older vehicles. I have torches and everything I use to break rust, chem baths, but sometimes we all know it just needs a BFH to get things to separate which is what has screwed up two of my vices.
So I was thinking of taking a 3/8 or 1/2 piece of Steel and welding it to the top. I have welded cast before with success. I figured i could cut the steel shape for the face out with my plasma cutter, drill some holes for deep welds into the existing face, then heat and quench my new face after cutting it before welding it on. I have everything on hand to do it for free, just not sure it is the best approach. I was thinking on the anvil itself I may want to drill down where I put the holes for welding the face on so when I fill it with metal it anchors in properly. Maybe like 3/4" deep holes with 7/16 bolts tapped in so the welds can anchor in nicely.
I have been anvil shopping on Craigslist for a year now. Bottom line is, I cant find what I need. Someone beats me to every good deal that pops up. At minumum I cant find anything I would actually spend the money on for under $500. I have too many other things on my list before a proper anvil. I do not have a forge to start. Any hot work I do is just oxy acetylene using a couple large tanks I have. I dont need to be able to hit that stuff on this, but I would like to be able to if I did for some odd job.
I also have quite a bit of 1/8" and 3/16" mild steel plate laying around. I was not sure if layering a steel base to weld the new face to may be the longest lasting option.
If anyone has tried this, let me know how it worked out for you please. Like I said, for what I need, it will do perfectly fine the way it sits. I would like a decent face though that doesnt marr with every tap if I can.
Also, I would be MIG welding this with a Millermatic 211, 75/25 mig mix gas, and er70s-6. In the past, when pre heating and cooling cast welds, I found my 200k BTU torpedo heater does the job quite well. For cooling I just slowly pull it further away and have never had any problems with cracking.
I figure this would take me a couple hours, and be nice if it comes out solid. The metal I have is scrap otherwise. I know it is no replacement for the real deal, but if it gets me by for a year I am happy. I really was not 100% sure if I should harden the steel or not either if I do go forward with this.

