Wind & Weathering :
air delivery & long term
erosion
Darrell Markewitz, with contributions by Neil Peterson
Experimental Iron Smelt : October 30, 2021
Introduction : The SMELT
For the last bloomery iron smelt of the 2021 season, a standard
pattern furnace was constructed, then fired using a typical
sequence. There were two primary goals to this experiment :
WIND - The recent acquisition of a high quality air flow meter allowed for precise and frequent measurements of the actual 'in line' delivery of air into the working furnace. A by-pass system allowed for the shifting to human powered bellows at a number of points, also with accurate recording of volumes produced.
WEATHERING - A new furnace was constructed on a clean sand pad, set to one side of the main smelting area. Photographic and video recordings were made of the extraction sequence. The remains of the furnace and the resulting debris field will be exposed to weather, and the aging documented as the features erode. The intent is to continue these observations over the next ten years.
Those who have been following my research into early bloomery iron smelting methods have seen a progressive shift into a more academic style of documentation over the years. Wind and Weathering is a total of over 6500 words, illustrated with over 50 images, a dozen tables and graphs, plus 14 minutes of video. Work started on this report in later December, and through to mid January, between research, writing, image preparation, data sorting to graph creation, then finally formatting and coding for publishing on to the web site.
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