Another barn build

   / Another barn build #31  
Would that work where a machinist said it was too hard to cut with a mill? I was wondering about cutting with an abrasive saw rather than grinding it down, thinking that would be less material to remove. Those point faces are 5”, and the chisel is 3” diameter. So it’s a lot of material to remove.
Back in the day, the blacksmith would heat it in the forge, hammer it back out and quench it. Very little waste of metal.
 
   / Another barn build #32  
Would that work where a machinist said it was too hard to cut with a mill? I was wondering about cutting with an abrasive saw rather than grinding it down, thinking that would be less material to remove. Those point faces are 5”, and the chisel is 3” diameter. So it’s a lot of material to remove.
In my experience an abrasive saw would most likely work harden the bit and then it would be a bear to cut. A carbide chop saw would do it but you would have to make a fixture to solidly hold the bit so that it wouldn't move.

I'm intrigued with the idea of forging it back to a point. I never thought of that but I like the idea.
 
   / Another barn build
  • Thread Starter
#33  
In my experience an abrasive saw would most likely work harden the bit and then it would be a bear to cut. A carbide chop saw would do it but you would have to make a fixture to solidly hold the bit so that it wouldn't move.

I'm intrigued with the idea of forging it back to a point. I never thought of that but I like the idea.
It’s hardened steel of some sort, but this is an area where I know very little. The machinist I took it to tried filing it to test the hardness, and said it was too hard to mill. Another guy I talked to said to check it with a file to see if it can be cut with a mill.

I’m guessing that if it can’t be cut with a mill, a carbine saw blade would have trouble too?

And I have no idea about the effect of heating from a grinder on hardness.

I have kept both of the old chisels in hopes of repointing if I can figure this out, so I welcome the advice. I just won’t be able to spend any time on it for a little while. I need to get this whole area cleared down to the target elevation so I can put together a profile drawing for engineering the slab and retaining walls. I’m racing to get the info before they ask for it…
 
   / Another barn build #34  
My first attempt would be to use a cut off blade on my 4 1/2 inch grinder. Cut off the four sides to make a point. It wouldn't have to be perfect, or even super pointy. I'd just want enough cut off so it would work for a little longer.
 
   / Another barn build #35  
Back in the day, the blacksmith would heat it in the forge, hammer it back out and quench it. Very little waste of metal.
Great idea. Should be a few old school blacksmiths in the OP's area.
 
   / Another barn build #36  
I’m guessing that if it can’t be cut with a mill, a carbine saw blade would have trouble too?

And I have no idea about the effect of heating from a grinder on hardness.
I can't say for sure on your chisels because I've never tried it but I've cut some very hard steel with ease with my carbide chop saw.

I'm not sure just how hard your chisels are but I'm thinking that it's probably just the surface that is hard. If the whole chisel was hardened then it would be quite brittle.

I have both an abrasive chop saw and a carbide tipped chop saw. The abrasive one cuts by grinding the steel away. If you cut too slowly the steel will harden under the cut. To the point where at times it's almost impossible to continue cutting.

A carbide tipped chop saw cuts by literally cutting the steel. It's a totally different process that results in curls of metal similar to a metal lathe. It does not work harden the the steel at all.

A bench grinder/angle grinder probably won't harden the chisel at all because you aren't grinding in a single area long enough to overheat the metal. Whereas the chop saw concentrates the heat in the area that you are cutting.
 
   / Another barn build
  • Thread Starter
#37  
I can't say for sure on your chisels because I've never tried it but I've cut some very hard steel with ease with my carbide chop saw.

I'm not sure just how hard your chisels are but I'm thinking that it's probably just the surface that is hard. If the whole chisel was hardened then it would be quite brittle.

I have both an abrasive chop saw and a carbide tipped chop saw. The abrasive one cuts by grinding the steel away. If you cut too slowly the steel will harden under the cut. To the point where at times it's almost impossible to continue cutting.

A carbide tipped chop saw cuts by literally cutting the steel. It's a totally different process that results in curls of metal similar to a metal lathe. It does not work harden the the steel at all.

A bench grinder/angle grinder probably won't harden the chisel at all because you aren't grinding in a single area long enough to overheat the metal. Whereas the chop saw concentrates the heat in the area that you are cutting.
Thanks. I have an Evolution metal saw with blades for both aluminum and steel. I could give it a try.
 
   / Another barn build #38  
Would an abrasive water jet do the job?
 
   / Another barn build #40  
Awesome project and thanks for sharing!

Would another option be to allow yourself to raise the grade of the new building by 12-18" to get the excavation done sooner? shouldn't be that awful to have a gentle ramp up into the building for your equipment storage, no?
 

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