Author Topic: Today's trip to the Cast Iron Junkyard  (Read 3237 times)

Offline Rick Gilley

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Today's trip to the Cast Iron Junkyard
« on: February 25, 2010, 03:11:43 PM »
Made my weekly trip today. I was on a mission to find every Erie style skillet I could, or skillets with the fancy handles, or gatemarked skillets. Found a few...and picked up a couple of older Wags. And a couple more one notch Lodges. Found a nice old gatemarked dutch oven I really like, I am thinking I have a gatemarked lid that will fit it. And I found my first one spout skillet today also.

I picked up 27 skillets today along with three Dutch ovens all for $70.00. Just a little over $2.00 each for each piece. So that wasn't bad at all.




Fancy handle skillets

Erie style skillets


Gatemarked dutch oven


I am up to 87 pieces of iron I need to clean....and 10 of those are one notch Lodges, #8's. And its time to start crappie fishing to.

Offline Chris Stairs

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Re: Today's trip to the Cast Iron Junkyard
« Reply #1 on: February 25, 2010, 03:39:46 PM »
Rick,
 I like that bottom gated dutch oven. Look how the 8, 10 and IN are spaced out to form "feet" to keep it from rocking on the gate. I've never seen that before, and such a simple idea.
  All nice finds for sure.
“The greatest enemy of knowledge is not ignorance, it is the illusion of knowledge.” ― Stephen Hawking

Offline Rick Gilley

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Re: Today's trip to the Cast Iron Junkyard
« Reply #2 on: February 25, 2010, 07:19:06 PM »
Darn, I just thought of something.....I had a big heavy #10 old fancy style handle skillet in my hands today. I sat it down in one of those junk piles and forgot it. Hopefully it will be there next week, it should be, as its probably been there for the last 50 years or so.
« Last Edit: February 25, 2010, 07:21:06 PM by poppop »

Offline Ray Benash

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Re: Today's trip to the Cast Iron Junkyard
« Reply #3 on: February 25, 2010, 07:52:34 PM »
Quote
Darn, I just thought of something.....I had a big heavy #10 old fancy style handle skillet in my hands today. I sat it down in one of those junk piles and forgot it. Hopefully it will be there next week, it should be, as its probably been there for the last 50 years or so.

Yeah, but nobody cared then and besides you have it out where a collector can see it now  ;) I like those fancy skillet handles.
Ray

Offline Rick Gilley

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Re: Today's trip to the Cast Iron Junkyard
« Reply #4 on: February 27, 2010, 06:51:59 AM »
Quote
Rick,
 I like that bottom gated dutch oven. Look how the 8, 10 and IN are spaced out to form "feet" to keep it from rocking on the gate. I've never seen that before, and such a simple idea.
  All nice finds for sure.

You are right Chris...I believe that was the founders intent. I didn't even catch that until you mentioned it.

Offline Chris Stairs

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Re: Today's trip to the Cast Iron Junkyard
« Reply #5 on: February 27, 2010, 07:30:48 AM »
Quote
Quote
Rick,
 I like that bottom gated dutch oven. Look how the 8, 10 and IN are spaced out to form "feet" to keep it from rocking on the gate. I've never seen that before, and such a simple idea.
  All nice finds for sure.

You are right Chris...I believe that was the founders intent. I didn't even catch that until you mentioned it.

Rick,
  Little details like that on these older items always cause me to speculate as to their origin and the intent of the maker.
  That pattern was probably smooth, and the letters added to the sand mold by the mold maker. They would have a bunch of different stamps they could use. The gate would not have been a problem for cooking on a big trivet on the hearth, or hanging from a crane over a bed of coals. Heck, it would not matter on a grate over a campfire. The only reason to use leveling feet would be for use on a cook stove. Earlier examples made from that same pattern may have had just been marked 10 IN and left at that. The use of number 8 to indicate a 10 inch item was a cook stove trait.
  So, while some foundries were changing to side gates to make a smooth bottom, or adding heat rings to the pattern to allow it sit flat, someone found a simple way to continue to use an old pattern, and make it work in a changing market.
  No way to know for sure, but always fun to think about.

Chris
“The greatest enemy of knowledge is not ignorance, it is the illusion of knowledge.” ― Stephen Hawking