Gargoyle
Official Cafe Stone Carver
I've been having fun the past few months...
Yes, and like many traditions, it developed and stuck around because it works extremely well. Lighter weight, more comfortable, and breaths better (cooler in the summer) than cloth hats, and it covers more of the hair, so it keeps dust off better than other hats. Also, I can afford it.I gotta ask: What's with the newspaper hat? Is that a tradition in your craft?
Yes, that's the stone ringing clear, a good sound. If it has a dead sound, that's when you have to worry.Walter,
Thanks for a fun and informative video.
Is the background sound when you are cutting, the limestone ringing from the vibration? (a similar sound when you were using a hand chisel). It reminds of the sound a piece of granite makes just before it become lots of smaller pieces.
And do you use a rotary compressor? The air chisel must consume a b-load of air.
Thanks,
Looks like they are moving back and forth, but the pressure is only on the forward stroke, then a quick return for the next stroke. The teeth on those only cut one way.Walter
Thank you for the excellent video, how ever my hands hurt just watching
also I like the riffers inaction
I have a butterfly valve about 24 or 30" up the hose, so I can just reach up and bump it to adjust. I don't want anything extra attached to the back of the hammer- no valves, no quick couplers... that just makes it longer, heavier and less maneuverable. Most carvers put quick couplers there, but it only saves maybe 1-1/2 seconds when changing a hammer compared to unscrewing it... a bad tradeoff, imho.love the vid. tyvm 4 that. my hammer looks to be the same as yours. i cobbled up a variable control which i attached to mine lets me use any pressure needed. also comes to compleat stop . saves air and vibes when not needed.
BTW, I changed hammers once or twice during the video- I cropped out the dead space. I'm using two sizes of Cuturi hammers there, a type E and a type V.love the vid. tyvm 4 that. my hammer looks to be the same as yours. i cobbled up a variable control which i attached to mine lets me use any pressure needed. also comes to compleat stop . saves air and vibes when not needed.
i dont recall the brand name, but i got mine years ago from a firm in barre, vermont. igot a lot of goodies from them. finally got smart and began making my own chisels. my fave tool, a five pound bush hammer. it could do a number on soft stone. it was manual not pneumatic.BTW, I changed hammers once or twice during the video- I cropped out the dead space. I'm using two sizes of Cuturi hammers there, a type E and a type V.
That would be Trow & Holden. I have a number of their hammers, including one from 1902. They rebuilt it for me, didn't charge me- it 's still under warranty.i dont recall the brand name, but i got mine years ago from a firm in barre, vermont. igot a lot of goodies from them. finally got smart and began making my own chisels. my fave tool, a five pound bush hammer. it could do a number on soft stone. it was manual not pneumatic.
i got an ingersol/rand maybe 30 years ago. did much stone work, including 3 tombstones. still going strong, tho i don't us it as much as when i was doing stonework. i've virtually ignored maintenamnce. ony changed the oil 3 times and the intake filter just once. oh. and btw, it was made in good ole conus.Most of the newer compressors are really junk, needing replacement after a few years. I sold my old one years ago and now am attending auctions for old machine shops and gas stations looking for a decent compressor to replace it. Dumb move on my part.
When I was first training in Italy many of the shops had Ingersol's that the U.S. Army left behind after the war. Solid, reliable compressors, the shops resisted replacing or upgrading and kept those going as long as they could.i got an ingersol/rand maybe 30 years ago. did much stone work, including 3 tombstones. still going strong, tho i don't us it as much as when i was doing stonework. i've virtually ignored maintenamnce. ony changed the oil 3 times and the intake filter just once. oh. and btw, it was made in good ole conus.