![]() When I replied about 100 years, he nodded and said. He took it in his parents garage, covered it with a tarp, and the anvil stood there for the next 40 years. He told me that when he was 15, a friend of the family then in his seventies, asked him if he could "-get rid of this for me". It turns out this was his parents house and he lived there all his life. To smooth things out I made some small talk and asked how he came about the anvil and if he did some smithing. The owner of the house was in his sixties and seemed a tad shy or something, like he was not in his comfort zone. The suburb was a very posh Sydney suburb, not your usual second hand tool burb.Īll went normal, the usual tyre kicking, the price was way up there, so I offered about half, and we settled half way. The supernumerary attachment is my boat's fuel tank and shouldn't be there, yet I don't know how to get rid of it. I am sorry that the photos are on their side, they are upright on my computer. Sand makes the tripod silent and oil prevents rust. The stand is a tripod with a 19mm top plate and the legs filled with sand soaked in oil. Ancient stock gift from a neighbour who found the stuff buried in his backyard. The stand is made of RHS 5" x 2.5" x 1/4". There is an anvil weight calculator to convert from hundredweight to kg or pounds in Anvilfire website, but not sure if it may be considered competing website. this photos are from when I built the stand for my work anvil.
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