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Custom Wrought Iron Twist Bar and Onions
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- Опубліковано 9 сер 2011
- Raleigh Wrought Iron Co.
www.raleighiron.com
2100 Garner Rd. Raleigh, NC 27610
Custom ornamental wrought iron railings, gates, fences, balconies, artistic hand forged wrought iron art. We serve the Raleigh, Durham, and Chapel Hill area of North Carolina for over 14 years.
i apprenticed for a local blacksmith before i joined the Marines. i loved it. had an awesome time working with the guy and it was one hell of an experience. this is a dying art and someone has to keep it alive!
A pleasure to watch a skilled artisan thank you.
you are a craftsman steel, very good your work, are people like you that clarify many doubts people this area of work, congratulation by the willingness to post your videos, I helped a lot
thank you for your videos, you are very skilled at what you do. keep the trade alive!
Thank you for sharing. You do great work.
for everyone who hasn't figured it out yet and keeps posting the question "how do you get the one bar to open up like that?" its separate pieces of bar welded together on the ends. along the middle where it opens is not a solid single piece of steal, so when he twists it, it isn't one piece splitting and opening its multiple bars separating naturally.
+Edward Teach huh
Thanks, makes logical sense now that you explain.
But the traditional technique works with the splitting of the steel, have a look:
www.heimatpflege-schifferstadt.de/aktuell/schmieden/index.html
i used HEBO machine ti twist this. But thank you so much for your Manual twist Idea it is really fantastic!
love learn from this guy.
ooghhgh the color it glows is just perfect
Sir, u're genus, thanks 4 d video
A true master very good work thank you for this video.
My favorite video on UA-cam. Great work!
Красивая работа приятно смотреть😆 Удачи !!!!
VERY interesting, a real pleasure !
Great video. I see you are from Raleigh. I down right out of Charlotte in Fort Mill SC.
Felicitări,frumos video!
my gods... it's so beautiful. Near the end, it almost looks like glass... so smooth and bright.
Whats its consistency feel like?
It's the first time I've ever saw something like this, and it's really nice.
Nice work!. Wish you the best!.
(Sry for my english, I know it's not good.)
Absolutely Genius
Отличное видео и хорошая работа !!! Привет из Москвы!!!
Verry good!
Greetings kind sir. ENJOYING THE METAL WORK? I AM!!!
Is it made from 4/6/9 bars either fusion welded with borax or mig'd,similar together,or did you split it beforehand?Thanks for uploading.Beautiful stuff!
Amazing
very interesting work what kind of material is that ? it's like you were just breaking the seams.keep them coming good video
amazing
Decorative railings and such
Muy hermoso trabajo.
You should make an arm to come off the vise so that the material doesn't warp as bad when you twist it.
muy buena la manera de hacerlo
wow thats cool!!!!
Cool !
@MultiGuitarify this is an assumption but I'm pretty sure its 4 smaller bars that he connected the ends of to form one bar then he heated the whole things so when he twisted the 4 smaller bars would separate in the center
muito bom !
What is the tool called that you used to twist the metal?
very good bows from mexico
These pieces of metal have like four 'strings' - why do they not melt together everywhere in the middle but why do they seem like one block at both endings?
So did he just heat the metal, bend it, unbend and it would turn into sections??
because magic
Where can I buy the materials used in the video?
That'smild steel / wrought Iron for you ...@ less than 0.25% Carbon content it has great properties... no matter what ye heat it to you won't weaken the structure of the steel...great stuff [mind you one really can't heat treat it ]
curious if you have to do something to the bar before twisting it to make the material separate.. or is it just the type of metal? I tried with 4140 I had and it just tuned back the other direction instead of opening up
Mason Wood its separate pieces of bar welded together on the ends. along the middle where it opens is not a solid single piece of steal, so when he twists it, it isn't one piece splitting and opening its multiple bars separating naturally.
Edward Teach That makes way more sense, thanks for the reply
what was the smallest piece you ever made?
thank God you told them lol
Yeah. I suspect this was taken with a digital camera whose CCD image sensor is sensitive to the infrared light given off by the heated metal as black-body radiation. I know a lot of such sensors can show infrared (point your TV remote at your webcam and see), but I've never seen this before...
yep. :)
I have seen a machine do this at only 100 Celsius, I wander what weakens the metal more, the increased grain size in this manual method, or the almost cold deformation in the machine.
By the way, this looks finer.
you sure it wasn't 1000°C ? Cause 100°C is just the temperature of boiling watter, that doesn't change anything in the metal :)
irlrp It's considered cold working. 100 c is enaugh to gain a little toughness though. Can also be done at ambient temperature, just slower.
Ok, very interesting, thanks !
I don't think cold working weakens the metal. The grains deform and it loses some of it's ability for permanent deformation and it becomes tougher, I think. When it it reaches the limit for deformation it just breaks. Heating it up will restore the round grain shape and ability to deform before the grain size actually starts growing.
You can put more degree of twist into hot steel, than cold. Cold, it will twist uniformly down the entire length. Whereas, when hot, the twist will vary according to the temp variation in the material. It's difficult to achieve uniform heat down a long piece of stock, which is why on longer pieces twists are often done in sections. You heat one area and twist to the desired rotation. Then, reheat, quench or cool the already twisted portion, and then twist the still heated portion into the part that's already done. This process is continued down the length, this will give a more uniform or balanced twist, on longer materials. Cold and hot twists both have their places. Most times, cold twisting is done on longer, simpler twist patterns, although it usually requires the use of mechanical assistance, due to the greater energy needed to turn it cold. Being more brittle, due to microfractures resulting from the twist, it can't be turned for as many rotations, before it will crack or break. These microfractures don't occur is twisting is done on properly heated steel. If needed, steel that has been hot twisted can be normalized, or reheated after the finished outcome has been reached. When steel is heated, the molecules expand, leading to increased plasticity and lessened tensile strength. Normalization is the solution. It's a process of heating the steel just above critical temp. This restores the molecular distribution, resulting in the metal regaining it's balance of ductile, tensile, and compressive strength. If needed, steel can be quenched in either oil or water, while above critical temp, to harden. If it's allowed to cool, without quenching, it will either anneal(greater plasticity) or normalize(balanced qualities) depending on the rate at which it cools. Cold twisting is good for simple, mass produced, jobs. If longer lasting, more durable, results are desired, then hot twisting is needed.
i want one
Are you from the future?!
Hello imagerian, or is it eemgorian?
would have to have it working 24/7 like a factory to pay it off. Take a lot of salesman or internet orders.
Hello Imgurans, we are all here to comment about our coincidental meeting im sure.
How do you get the metal to open up like that?
Taen its separate pieces of bar welded together on the ends. along the middle where it opens is not a solid single piece of steal, so when he twists it, it isn't one piece splitting and opening its multiple bars separating naturally.
OK, thank you that clears a bit more up now haha cheers
3:12 Steve Jobs ?
:10 this is how light sabers are made
This guy would drool if he ever saw "hebo money machine" video
Fuck yeah, Imgur!!!!
I had a relative that did this for decades and now the Hebo machines obsolete the whole process.
it looks hot...glowy hot..
estan soldadas d los extremos las varillas
OK good fer
Anyone else notice the heated metal looks blue then pink for it's glow compared to the normal orange/yellow. Weird camera.
Двоечник.Он когда-нибудь видел как делаются карзинки?
So this is what it's like outside of Imgur...
nooooooooh! ,, very prehistory !
Покажи как надо,буду благодарен.......
Why is Steve Jobs making wrought iron stuff now?
why does your camera not want to focus? my eyes are so watery from watching.
i wish my bones were a solid indestructible iron that could just melt back into place if broken or bent instantly, all organs could heal instantly & all the beer i could drink would never destroy my liver.. but were all poop)=
I don't see any 9gagers in here !
So what? I only hand make babies. For everything else I want decent quality at a decent price. And these Hebö machines do provide good quality.
wtf is imgur?
Can I do this in skyrim?
onafnno1 you would crap your pants if you knew the price for that machine ;-) Would you believe around 40K? Everyone knows about that machine and few have it because it is not worth the money.
then the product would no longer be hand made. it would be just another low quality, sweat shop product that is made in china.
Yeah, it surely looks pretty cool, but I'm still wandering what the fuck is it good for?
Repost...
хуйня получаєтьса а ще таке обладнання, на холодно краще.!!!
don't be THAT guy
please don't do that
IMGUR!
Now try hot cutting that square bar and making a real basket....May as well buy it from a catalog.... No talent here, just a home made copy.
OK good fer