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Articles by Charles Lewton-Brain
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[36] Making a Chasing or forming tool
We are assuming you are using W1 water hardening square stock drill rod, W1 tool steel. Many suppliers will sell W1 tool steel. It is often called drill rod (In England 'silver steel'). It should be square for less work in tool making, but round drill rod can be filed or forged to square. You should not use key stock, which some hardware suppliers will try and sell to you: it cannot be hardened as described below.... (2002)
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Show me more articles from: [Brain Press Publications]|[Charles Lewton-Brain]
Releated Categories:[Homemade Tools]|[Chasing and repousse]

 

[23] Making a pair of prong notching pliers
These pliers notch round prongs easily to a given depth and replace a bur for the job. They are made to suit a specific size prong and one makes similar pliers for different prong shapes, but all based on this idea. One obtains a pair of chain nose pliers either new or from a flea market and converts them into prong notching pliers.... (1994)
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Show me more articles from: [Cheap Thrills in the Tool Shop]|[Charles Lewton-Brain]
Releated Categories:[Small Tools]|[Customize Your Tools]
ISBN: 096985106

 

[56] Making Earring posts by hand
Yes you can make your own earring posts. It is generally more cost effective to buy them, but making them is not a problem and there are times that it is useful to know how.... (1997)
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Show me more articles from: [Brain Press Publications]|[Charles Lewton-Brain]
Releated Categories:[Wire Working]|[Hinges & Catches]|[Bench Tips & Tricks]

 

[181] Metals Safety Information
Goldsmiths work with metals. Our bodies react to metals, their dusts, salts and oxides. The metals that jewelers come in contact with include gold, copper, silver, zinc, iron, steel, platinum, palladium, rhodium, iridium, titanium, niobium, aluminum and ones that we should consider not having around any more at all in the workshop: nickel, lead, mercury, chromium, selenium, cadmium, arsenic, antimony.... (1999)
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Show me more articles from: [The Jewelry Workshop Safety Report]|[Charles Lewton-Brain]
Releated Categories:[Workshop Safety]|[Metals]
ISBN: 0969851049

 

[360] Methods of Closing Jump Rings
In high volume production operations, many jump rings need to be closed one after another. For such fast paced operations, pliers simply won't do. Factory workers need efficient tools for closing jump rings. One such tool consists of a ring that has a slot head on it for gripping and steadying a jump ring (see photo). To make it, you will need a.... (2004)
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Show me more articles from: [AJM]|[Charles Lewton-Brain]
Releated Categories:[Wire Working]|[Bench Tips & Tricks]
ISBN: B00006K39S

 

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