Smitty if you have a video editor, you may consider subtitles, explaining what is happening. But the video is crystal clear and you can see exactly what is happening, but if I didn't have a background in shoe making, perhaps I could have been lost.
I will let Bill give you the play-by-play but here's some pictures of the day. I learned a lot and can't wait to implement my new found wisdom.
So this is a shoe before Bill Adams horseshoe making lecture clinic day, none of the nail holes worked. Obviously This is after a day with Bill. All of the nail holes are not only angled pretty well they all work for a CH5.
Remember the part where I told you if you want them to look as good as mine, you have to grind on it for a half hour. I teach him everything I know and he still doesn't know any thing. Seriously though, if you get that much improvement between shoes you'll be just fine.
Very well done tejun much mo better .. and its great you will show ur work ..maybe it will encourage others as well..
Train your eye to the white line when you are trimming and punching or creasing...feet are different and a nontraditional pattern of stamping or fullering for a crease depends on different issues...shape, then find where the nails truly need to go on that hoof and well, that's how I see it...
Well I learned a lot trying to show Tejun how I go about things. I learned that I can't really work, think, and talk at the same time. I did things like started building the hinds for the wrong foot (they were different lenghts), had a creaser head that wouldn't stay tight, and a drill bit that was a 64th too small so my taping went slower. I thought of a lot of things later, that I should have showed him. Couldn't have asked for a person more interested in learning though. Continually asking questions and actually listening to the answers, then asking more. Asked a bunch of intelligent questions even. He seemed to enjoy hanging out enough to stay around for ten hours or so, and seemed to enjoy my Sherman's and an IPA. Next time I'll have a couple morman Farriers out so they can keep an eye on each other and stay out of my cooler and smokes.
Tejun your heels are SQUARE, you have nothing in your toe forget about the fullering at the moment and learn the basics
Good effort Tejun you can see the improvement but id agree with Smitty. As an apprentice I made maybe 100 toes then when I was getting them right I had to back over all the ones that were wrong and correct them. I then forged the heels on all those 100 lengths of steel and by the time I had 100 done they were right so went back over the first ones and so on. Its a lot easier when broken down and your hammer control and coordination at the anvil will have improved by the time ya get to more difficult fullering, nail holes and clipping,(my fullering is still rough ) Working with the likes of Bill is obviously the best job but if ya can't do that regularly you can at least watch videos on you tube like the Craig Trinka and Chris Gregory ones I posted below before each time ya practice so its fresh in your mind. I also think if ya can get someone to make a and give you a length with just a toe bend, a toe bend and heel forged etc, each stage of the shoe broken down to look at and compare your own to its a huge help. View: http://youtu.be/DVt89LCfeiA View: http://youtu.be/BZNN9FwZOBc http://youtu.be/TRBi2DxLeC0 Craig Trinka bumping a toe and forging and fullering http://youtu.be/JV2RzWSye9Y Craig Trinka pulling clips
Hey Smitty, The nothing in your toe part, are you referring to when they take the bar cool the ends and put it vertical on the anvil face and smack it so the toe gets fatter? I am pretty sure that is what you mean, but just verifying.