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R Ashby
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Posted: Tue 27 Dec, 2011 3:37 am Post subject: Question about movie forges |
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In both Pirates of the Caribbean- Curse of the Black Pearl, and in the new Conan there are big cog/wheel things in forges- the donkey-driven one in POC, and a water wheel in Conan. Is this just Hollywood, or would there have been something like that in ancient forges, and if so, what would the be used for?
Thanks!
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Sander Marechal
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Posted: Tue 27 Dec, 2011 4:01 am Post subject: |
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IIRC in both movies the cogs power the bellows. I have no idea if that's historically accurate or plausible.
The Knights Hospitaller: http://www.hospitaalridders.nl
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Edward Rees
Location: Portland, OR Joined: 02 Dec 2010
Posts: 29
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Posted: Tue 27 Dec, 2011 5:23 am Post subject: |
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Historically the use of water power was the first step toward industrialization. Forges used water power for trip hammers and bellows. Both of which dramatically increased the quality and quantity of the steel produced.
The church is close but the roads are icy; the tavern is far, I will walk carefully.
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Arne Focke
Industry Professional
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Posted: Tue 27 Dec, 2011 7:20 am Post subject: |
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In bigger cities, with a huge demand, such a bellows would be plausible, at least from late medieval times onward.
(Not that Conan is referring to any real time period.)
The average village blacksmith would have used a hand pulled version and did so until a few decades ago.
(My own are still hand/foot powered.)
More important is one little sentence in Pirates of the Caribbean "Not where I left you...?".
A blacksmith always stores his tools in the exact same spot.
So schön und inhaltsreich der Beruf eines Archäologen ist, so hart ist auch seine Arbeit, die keinen Achtstundentag kennt! (Wolfgang Kimmig in: Die Heuneburg an der oberen Donau, Stuttgart 1983)
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Jean Thibodeau
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Posted: Tue 27 Dec, 2011 7:26 am Post subject: |
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Edward Rees wrote: | Historically the use of water power was the first step toward industrialization. Forges used water power for trip hammers and bellows. Both of which dramatically increased the quality and quantity of the steel produced. |
I would add grinding wheels and in the 19th century steam power was used to power lathes and other cutting tools using straps and gearing to transfer mechanical energy from steam engines to all these tools before electric power was known or used.
Probably too advances for the Medieval period but water power could be used to power complex machinery, at least in theory, in the same way that steam power was used: All that would be needed would be imagination and somebody having had the idea in period.
By the late 18th century with the very early Industrial revolution some of these ideas where starting to come into being.
You can easily give up your freedom. You have to fight hard to get it back!
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David Lewis Smith
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Posted: Tue 27 Dec, 2011 8:02 am Post subject: |
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I may be wrong in this but I think the early use of the word 'mill' involved more than 'milling grain' and often would have multiple buildings that were water powered, to include billows and hammers. I can not access YouTube from here but there is a vid of a German recreation group that built a medieval power hammer. The shaft of the hammer was a 18" timber it looked like.
David L Smith
MSG (RET)
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Michael Curl
Location: Northern California, US Joined: 06 Jan 2008
Posts: 487
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Posted: Tue 27 Dec, 2011 8:55 am Post subject: |
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There indeed were waterwheel powered bellows, and water powered trip hammers, and by the Renaissance, water powered grind wheels. Look toward the bottom.
http://www.oakeshott.org/metal.html
E Pluribus Unum
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R D Moore
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R Ashby
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Posted: Tue 27 Dec, 2011 1:38 pm Post subject: |
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Thank you! Question answered! :-)
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