A lot of attention has been given to forges, steels, heat treating methods and even hammers, but not much has been said on anvils. Lets fix that!
I have three anvils. My pride and joy is a 70# Vulcan. It has a tempered steel plate (~1.25" thick) and then the body of the anvil is cast iron. I like this one b/c (aside from the fact I got it dirt cheap
) it's solid but doesn't ring for ages! Neighbors appreciate that! The rebound on it isn't as nice as a forged steel anvil or even a cast steel, but at a fraction of the cost of a good Peter Wright anvil it'll do! Speaking of one of those, I'll be borrowing one (indefinitely) as soon as my smithy is set up :D
One thing you really want to avoid is the 'anvil-shaped-objects' that are popping up all over the place. These are all cast iron and are next to worthless for any type of forging.
Don't want to spend the cash on a "real" anvil? No problem. My first anvil is a
Stake Anvil and was forged from an axle rod. Mine has about a 1.25" square face and is perfect for blades. It's still useful to have a larger flat surface for straightening blades, but I like working on the stake more than the big anvil for lots of things.
Still too much work for you? Try a piece of railroad track! Contrary to what most people do, the best way to use these is NOT by forging on the top surface! There's no backup mass below most of it, it's springy (bad thing) and will make your chunck of steel react like a much lighter anvil. A better way is to turn it on end. That'll give you about 1.5"x 2.5" (can't remember right now) work surface with lots of steel directly below it. Depending on the length of the track you're using, that will make you anvil react to blows like a heavier anvil. There's an article in the link at the end of this post showing some RR track setups that I really like.
Still too much work for you? Go down to the local hardware store and buy yourself a 20#+ sledge. Drill a hole about 2" deep in a stump and big enough to pound an end in and go to town. It's about the cheapest anvil you can get! If you leave the handle on it you can even use it to hang your (growing) collection of tongs!
Here's some more information for you from
AnvilFire There's LOTS of good info on that site!
So, what are you using?