FACTOID # 42: English speaking kids are the world's biggest novel readers - but the least enthusiastic comic readers.
 
 Home   Encyclopedia   Statistics   Countries A-Z   Flags   Maps   Education   Forum   FAQ   About 
 
 
 
WHAT'S NEW
RECENT ARTICLES
More Recent Articles »
 

SEARCH ALL

FACTS & STATISTICS    Advanced view

Search encyclopedia, statistics and forums:

 

 

(* = Graphable)

 

 


Encyclopedia > Forged

This article is about smithing. Forge was also the name of a map editor for the Marathon computer game. See also forgery.


The forge or smithy is the workplace of a smith or a blacksmith. "Forging" is the term for shaping metal by use of heat and hammer.


A basic smithy contains a forge, sometimes called a hearth (for heating the metals; commonly iron or steel) to a malleable temperature, an anvil (to lay the metal pieces on while hammering), and a slack tub (to rapidly cool, and thus harden, forged metal pieces in). Tools include tongs to hold the hot metal, and hammers to strike the hot metal.


Once the final shape has been forged, iron and steel in particular often get some type of heat treatment. This can result in various degrees of hardening or softening depending on the details of the treatment.


Forging is the working of metal by plastic deformation. It is distinguished from machining, the shaping of metal by removing material (drilling, sawing, milling, turning, grinding, etc.), and from casting, wherein metal in its molten state is poured into a mold, whose form it retains on solidifying. The processes of raising, rolling, swaging, and drawing are essentially forging operations although they are not commonly so called because of the special techniques and tooling they require. Some of these techniques are shown in this animation of the forging of simple flat firetongs: [1] (http://members.vol.at/schmiede/feuerzange.htm).


Many metals are typically forged cold but iron and its alloys are almost always forged hot because of their great resistance to deformation.


Forging was done historically by a smith using hammer and anvil, and though the use of water power in the production and working of iron dates to the twelfth century CE the hammer and anvil are by no means obsolete.


In industry forging is commonly done either with machine presses or with hammers powered by steam or compressed air. These hammers are very large, having reciprocating weights in the thousands of pounds. Smaller power hammers (500 pounds or less reciprocating weight) and hydraulic presses are common in art smithies as well.


In industry a distinction is made between open- and closed-die forging. In open-die work the metal is free to move except where contacted by the hammer, anvil, or other (often hand-held) tooling. In closed-die work the material is placed in a die resembling a mold, which it is forced to fill by the application of pressure. A great many common objects (wrenches, crankshafts...) are produced by closed-die forging, which is well suited to mass production. Open-die forging lends itself to very short runs and is appropriate for art smithing and custom work.


Closed-die forging is more expensive for mass production than is casting, but produces a much stronger part, and is thus used for tools, critical machine parts, and the like. One particular variant, drop forging, is often used to mass produce flat wrenches and other household tools.


Related Topics


  Results from FactBites:
 
Forge - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (1579 words)
The forge or smithy is the workplace of a smith or a flsmith.
Forging was done historically by a smith using hammer and anvil, and though the use of water power in the production and working of iron dates to the twelfth century CE the hammer and anvil are by no means obsolete.
A forge of this type is essentially a hearth or fireplace designed to allow a fire to be controlled such that metal introduced to the fire may be brought to a malleable state or to bring about other metallurgical effects (hardening, annealling, and drawing temper as examples).
Forge (comics) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (1740 words)
Forge is a mutant with an innate superhuman talent for invention - an intuitive genius, it is as natural as breathing for him.
Forge is a mutant whose intuitive mechanical instinct automatically interprets the functions and operations of any machine or technological device, a skill that combined with his natural intelligence gives him a superhuman talent to conceive, design and build highly-advanced mechanical devices; and operate, modify and disassemble existing technology or create countermeasures for it.
Forge's superhuman talent for invention does not mean that he is of a superhuman intellect, even a genius at invention must for the most part consciously work out the theoretical principles behind the invention and then the design of the invention itself through a series of logical steps.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

COMMENTARY     


Share your thoughts, questions and commentary here
Your name
Your comments

Want to know more?
Search encyclopedia, statistics and forums:

 


Lesson Plans | Student Area | Student FAQ | Reviews | Press Releases |  Feeds | Contact
The Wikipedia article included on this page is licensed under the GFDL.
Images may be subject to relevant owners' copyright.
All other elements are (c) copyright NationMaster.com 2003-5. All Rights Reserved.
Usage implies agreement with terms, 1022, m