OLD LEATHER SMITH here. I believe you did an excellent job considering what you had on hand. The only thing I would change is using upholstery hide, it's stronger, and you don't have 2 piece it. GOD'S BLESSINGS ✝️⚾🙃
inspiring! great video, love the pace of it, right to the point, excellent narrative. Going to make my own bellows, hope they turn out half as good. Rock on, brother!
One thing I might have done differently would have been to use wood strips rather than leather. That is how were rebuilt the four bellows in the shop at Allaire Village.
Can I Monday morning Quarterback? It is Monday, after all. What about pointing the bellows down and drooping the paper over the bellows and starting at the widest part then working your way down the sides to determine the amount of leather needed?
Hey Jimmy... Do you (or anyone) know of a video or link that actually shows how (or the parts to) a "real bellows" in the traditional context? I have an old one to repair/replace parts on restoration and can't use all the modern plastics, screws, and plywood. Note...Warning...!!!...PVA...WILL NOT...stand up to cyclic bending over time if this bellow is heavily used with cloth leather in my experience as it tends to delaminate... Thanks...
id recommend adding a simple treadle pedal so you can pump it up with your legs and feet rather than waste valuable arm energy that can be used for beating steel on the anvil
What's the point in using leather or even wood when you're just going to use modern stainless steel phillips head screws? Edit: Damn, you used plywood then clad it with real wood? Why? This thing is so heavy and cumbersome and pointless. You made a bellows shaped object!
Fantastic build.
Dang. When i saw the thumbnail i thought this was gonna be handheld
OLD LEATHER SMITH here. I believe you did an excellent job considering what you had on hand. The only thing I would change is using upholstery hide, it's stronger, and you don't have 2 piece it. GOD'S BLESSINGS ✝️⚾🙃
😊😊
inspiring! great video, love the pace of it, right to the point, excellent narrative. Going to make my own bellows, hope they turn out half as good. Rock on, brother!
One thing I might have done differently would have been to use wood strips rather than leather. That is how were rebuilt the four bellows in the shop at Allaire Village.
Super cool.
You are an artiste
Frome algeria
Not bad for a first shot and it actually works
i,ll try
Can I Monday morning Quarterback? It is Monday, after all.
What about pointing the bellows down and drooping the paper over the bellows and starting at the widest part then working your way down the sides to determine the amount of leather needed?
Could this be scaled down for a hobbyist or would the design not work as a bellows for a smoker?
Hey Jimmy...
Do you (or anyone) know of a video or link that actually shows how (or the parts to) a "real bellows" in the traditional context? I have an old one to repair/replace parts on restoration and can't use all the modern plastics, screws, and plywood.
Note...Warning...!!!...PVA...WILL NOT...stand up to cyclic bending over time if this bellow is heavily used with cloth leather in my experience as it tends to delaminate...
Thanks...
they are called paddles
id recommend adding a simple treadle pedal so you can pump it up with your legs and feet rather than waste valuable arm energy that can be used for beating steel on the anvil
Как называется это по русскому?
What's the point in using leather or even wood when you're just going to use modern stainless steel phillips head screws? Edit: Damn, you used plywood then clad it with real wood? Why? This thing is so heavy and cumbersome and pointless. You made a bellows shaped object!