n 1993, Nimba Anvils was founded with the goal of providing the best
quality double-horn anvils manufactured in the United States. There
are three distinctive features of the Nimba anvil: the thick-waist,
the placement of hardy and pritchel holes, and the dimensions of both
the round and square horns.
Working
your material directly over such a large mass provides superior
stability, giving your blow the greatest possible power. You can work
hard even at the very end of the tip of either horn without losing any
of this stability. The hardy and pritchel holes are placed close to the
body of the anvil to take advantage of its thick-waisted center of
gravity. Any operations involving the hardy/pritchel holes (punching
and drifting) or using tooling (hot-cut, side-cut, butcher, etc.) are
more effective. In this way, the superior stability of our anvils comes
from an intelligent use of the physics of the core mass.
The
dimensions from tip of round horn to tip of square horn and the width
of the face make Nimba anvils one of the most generous and versatile of
working surfaces. The taper of our square horn is an especially
graceful line to a real point, providing the greatest variation of
surface width of any anvil we know. This variation of surface width
allows the broadest functionality. There are no special gadgets built
into our classic design and the anvil’s adaptability to a variety of
smithing applications is only limited by the smith’s skills, not the
inherent design of the anvil itself.
We
pride ourselves in our manufacturing quality. The most skilled and
experienced foundrymen, machinists and heat-treaters in Seattle are
using the best equipment and technology available to make pristine
castings with toughness and resilience. We use 8640, a high-grade
nickel-chromium-molybdenum steel known for its yield strength, impact
toughness, and exceptionally deep hardening properties. Our anvils are
cast in one piece rather than in separate parts welded together. Each
anvil is individually heat-treated and tempered and we test each to
guarantee hardness within a range of 50-52 Rockwell. The entire anvil
is heat-treated which penetrates all surfaces of the anvil, preventing
long-term deformation. The final inspection and grind-finish results in
the most beautiful anvils made in the world today.