38th Winter 515
She needed to make equipment for an armourer. The first thing would be a hammer. Start simple and basic, something she could always use if it came to it. Except, she didn't want to make it simple. Normally, she would have "cheated", using shortcuts and bits of odd equipment to create the hammer head. This time, she planned to make the punches needed, so she could this again, much easier.
The blacksmith settled on making a punch first, but adjusting it to form a drift also. She took the metal, flipping it in her hand before heating it. Glowing hot in the dark forge, she began to taper one end, very slightly. Using the faces of the anvil and hammer, she drew it out, hammering at an angle. It was a short taper, only slightly thinner than width of the metal itself, but that would do for what she wanted. Actually, there was a way to make it better. Using a mixture of upsetting and drawing, Alija hammered down the corners of the square taper, distributing the metal to the very end with small hit of the hammer. Now it was more octagonal, more suited.
Putting it back in the fire to heat, Alija let it reach a slightly hotter temperature before she took it back out, ready to make the other end. This would be much longer, thinner and round.
She hammered quickly, drawing out the metal into a long spike. The rough surface with hammer strikes using the edge of the hammer was flattened out quickly, simply hammering straight down to redistribute the metal. The smith then spun it along the face of the anvil, hammering often in an attempt to make it rounded. She stopped to examine it. No, something wasn't right. Alija quickly noticed what - it was meant to have an end, however small, not a spike. Easily fixed. She held it upright, hammering on the metal to upset it to become flat again. The metal moved to form a build up around the edge of this face. Sighing, Alija hammered that down too, drawing it across the rest of the taper. Now it was done.
Actually, it wasn't. She wanted to mount it on a wooden stick, which she had prepared. First Alija used an existing punch to make a hole through this one. Then, she used an even smaller one to make a perpendicular hole, perfect for a nail. She doused the punch in water to let it cool, then, when it was cool enough to hold bare handed, forced the handle through. It held firm even without the nail, but she added it anyway. That was easy, hammering a nail into wood easier than hammering metal. Great.
.
She needed to make equipment for an armourer. The first thing would be a hammer. Start simple and basic, something she could always use if it came to it. Except, she didn't want to make it simple. Normally, she would have "cheated", using shortcuts and bits of odd equipment to create the hammer head. This time, she planned to make the punches needed, so she could this again, much easier.
The blacksmith settled on making a punch first, but adjusting it to form a drift also. She took the metal, flipping it in her hand before heating it. Glowing hot in the dark forge, she began to taper one end, very slightly. Using the faces of the anvil and hammer, she drew it out, hammering at an angle. It was a short taper, only slightly thinner than width of the metal itself, but that would do for what she wanted. Actually, there was a way to make it better. Using a mixture of upsetting and drawing, Alija hammered down the corners of the square taper, distributing the metal to the very end with small hit of the hammer. Now it was more octagonal, more suited.
Putting it back in the fire to heat, Alija let it reach a slightly hotter temperature before she took it back out, ready to make the other end. This would be much longer, thinner and round.
She hammered quickly, drawing out the metal into a long spike. The rough surface with hammer strikes using the edge of the hammer was flattened out quickly, simply hammering straight down to redistribute the metal. The smith then spun it along the face of the anvil, hammering often in an attempt to make it rounded. She stopped to examine it. No, something wasn't right. Alija quickly noticed what - it was meant to have an end, however small, not a spike. Easily fixed. She held it upright, hammering on the metal to upset it to become flat again. The metal moved to form a build up around the edge of this face. Sighing, Alija hammered that down too, drawing it across the rest of the taper. Now it was done.
Actually, it wasn't. She wanted to mount it on a wooden stick, which she had prepared. First Alija used an existing punch to make a hole through this one. Then, she used an even smaller one to make a perpendicular hole, perfect for a nail. She doused the punch in water to let it cool, then, when it was cool enough to hold bare handed, forced the handle through. It held firm even without the nail, but she added it anyway. That was easy, hammering a nail into wood easier than hammering metal. Great.
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