PICTURES and some info on that military anvil

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This anvil is 33 inches long and weighs approximately 340 lbs. I tried to measure rebound by dropping a 1 inch diameter hard bearing ball on it and measuring how high it would rebound. My best attempts at measurement ended up with rebound at 85-90%.

This anvil came with a combination cast iron/wooden base. It also had a "shelf" that can be mounted in the pritchel hole.

Reply to
Ignoramus29895
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How much did you pay for the garden gnome?

Paul

Reply to
co_farmer

Very nice anvil. What did you pay per lb? Any maker markings on it? You were definitely in the right place at the right time. Cute kid, too. :-)

Reply to
Rob Fertner

I paid probably too much, about $2.20 per lb, but I liked its condition and the base, pritchel attachment etc. I bid online without seeing it first, aside from seeing the auction picture. The 85-90% rebound is an illustration of the principle that the military buys only the best stuff.

As far as I could tell, this anvil does not bear any "evidence of use". It is lightly rusted on top and my next step is removing that.

i

Reply to
Ignoramus29895

The only marking that I could find is that letter "V" near the bottom.

i

Reply to
Ignoramus29895

Is there a 10 or 11 or 12 on it ?

Number of Stone in size. If I can recall it.

Mart>

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Reply to
Martin H. Eastburn

I could not find anything. Maybe something will show if I wirebrush off that military paint job.

i

Reply to
Ignoramus29895

On Fri, 14 Nov 2008 17:54:41 -0800 (PST), the infamous " snipped-for-privacy@coinet.com" scrawled the following:

It came with his current wife, Paul. ;)

-- If we all did the things we are capable of doing, we would literally astound ourselves. -- Thomas A. Edison

Reply to
Larry Jaques

In the absence of a stone weight, whch increases the liklihood of US origin, perhaps the it is a "V" as in victory? WWII

Mike Graf

Ignoramus29895 wrote:

Reply to
CGraf

This anvil could be of wartime era, like about half of the stuff that they sold (lots of wartime dated machinery).

i

Reply to
Ignoramus4582

My Navy desk from surplus at a (was) local naval plane maker - "Invincible"

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The desk on the left. No longer made from what I can tell. It is a rock! Ball bearing sliders. The other desk was a nice Mahogany over-coated gray and repaired with plywood.

So Victory or model V is likely.

Mart> >> In the absence of a stone weight, whch increases the liklihood of US

Reply to
Martin H. Eastburn

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