![]() Posted 12:34 (#6486276 - in reply to #6481165) Subject: RE: Large anvil?įor a good Peter Wright, $10 a pound is not out of line. He could pour aluminum anvils every day for people who just want to look at them. 7 4 1 6 2 22 3 1 dozen 147 340 1 124 156 244 4 4 1 182 182 dozen 1, 052 1,052 548 3 4 1 3 340 257 Quantity awarded. (The Last Samurai ) was one I can remember. I have a neighbor who's business is casting and pouring both bronze and aluminum replica om Early Spanish types all the way through the Civil War. I got about a 125 lb Peter Wright anvil, 'Western Chief' forge blower and blast. He had the contents of his late fathers smith shop, closed in 1953 when his dad had died. It also had 2 attachments that fit into the square hole on the anvil. The numbers stamped on the side are 1 2 2. I bought a 100 pounder for $250 on a farm sale a couple years ago. ![]() If people pay good money to just sit in living room, someone needs to make a mold to pour some concrete ones. Have no idea how it got broke or where the horn is. These are not cheap but a lot of the used ones are in bad shape and priced too high. Posted 00:40 (#6482581 - in reply to #6480963) Subject: RE: Large anvil?Ĭentaur Forge has new ones. If you google search Renato Muskovic Anvil you might get some contact info. ![]() There’s a semi local guy that made a mold and gets large blacksmith anvils made. Stab in the dark but a new real steel anvil might be 4 times that price. Posted 23:01 (#6482515 - in reply to #6481922) Subject: RE: Large anvil?Īnvils that sell new for around $1/pound will be cast iron and not highly sought after by a blacksmith. Non-ringing anvils are also sometimes used in urban shops, so as not to annoy the neighbors. Some anvils are solid cast iron with no steel face. listed 355$ A local auction has a couple (Chupp Auctions ) Shipshewana, Indiana had a 450lb one listed and a smaller one can't find the add. In my neighborhood it'd bring around 2/lb, perhaps more. Last two sales I went to, there were a 150 and a 200+ pounder, and both went over $800 to women who were going to put them in their living room or sell them to someone else to put them in their living room. While in the hospital last summer my smaller one grew legs and disappeared. There are lots of antique shops that have one or 2 sitting around. I've been looking for years, there're around, but they usually bring way more than I'm willing to spend. Posted 16:37 (#6481520 - in reply to #6480963) Subject: RE: Large anvil?Ĭouple years back I stopped at a junk store north of Waco Tx on I35, he had two nice Abilene 100 pounders for $100 each. but it doesn't mean he will sell it at that price. Seller can ask anything he wants on craigslist. They usually bring $500-700 at auctions around here. anvil, in good condition, with one hardie, for 227.50, and a 200-pound Vulcan brand in good shape for 300. Here's one that is not too far from me that weighs 291# I found anvils selling on eBay recently at these prices: a 150- pound example with no name went for 260 a 110-pound Peter Wright brand for 169 a 60-pound no-name with the horn point broken off for 60 a 170-pound Sterling Hardware Co. Quality, welding and other anvil miscellaneaĢ006 - 2012 Jock Dempsey, Copyright © 1998, 2023 anvilfire.Craigslist.The set of weights would never have more than a total of 27 in pounds, only 3 quarter hundred weights and as many hundred weights as needed.Ī pounds weight set without duplicates or extras would be composed of: The system seems unweildly but if you use a balance scale and the proper weights you just count the large weights, and total up the small ones and you are done. This calculator does not have a place for tonnes. 2240 pounds (20 CWT) and over is a "long tonne".The last (right hand) position is pounds and must be equal to 27 or less.If it looks like a five then it is a two or a three. The middle position equals quarters (1/4) of a hundred weight.Any position can be zero, and IF zero is marked with a zero character (0).Where the base unit is a hundredweight (CWT or 112 pounds) which is divided into quarter hundredweights, stones and pounds.Ĭommonly used to mark anvil weights before the adoption of the metric system in Great Britain.Įnter digits from your anvil or other object
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