I got the idea for this topic from a recent post about anvils. I realize that to get a decently sized anvil is not always the easiest thing to do, nor the logical $$$ to spend on a new one for the hobiest knife maker.
Well, I saw this at a recent hammer-in, brought by a full time knife maker, and I INSTANTLY decided I had to make one!!
There is a LAW applied here! I don't remember the exact rule, but it's something like 50#s of anvil per 1# of hammer! That's right. You shold have about a 150# anvil for use with a three # hammer.
These little blocks of steel that some guys are talking about just don't cut it.
The reason for that weight is that each time you strike you work piece with the hammer, it's getting hit on the bottom side as well - from the anvil UP! But this can only be done if the anvil base has enough MASS to absorb and return the inertia of the blow. Small blocks of steel just can't do that.
So, look at these pictures and see if you can devise you own ideas!
There IS one of those small pieces of steel blocks, but it's welded to a vertical piece of 100#+ of railroad track underneath it! It appears this is the only length this guy had, but it shold not be too difficult to get a piece cut that would go all the way to the ground. I know I have a LARGE and tall - not long - piece of track that is what is called 90# rail, meaning 90#s per foot! It's HEAVY. So, stood on end, and with a decently sized square block of steel on TOP of it, there would be plenty of mass below it.
Anyway, I thought you guys might get some ideas from this.