Happybuy Single Horn Anvil 44Lbs Steel Anvil Blacksmith for Sale Forge Tools and Equipment Anvil Rugged Round and Square Hole Horn Anvil Blacksmith Jewelers Metalsmith Blacksmith Tool








Key features
- •【PREMIUM MATERIAL】- This anvil is made of drop-forged, high-grade steel for high hardness, maximum strength and durability. It withstands heavy blows.
- •【FUNCTIONAL STRUCTURE】- Round horn and flat horn. Rounded horn for smooth bending and shaping, the hardy hole for accessories, punching and bending. Solid base keeps sturdy.
- •【SURFACE TREATMENT】- Fully polished surface area, through quenching treatment, the spray coating effectively relieves the oxidation reaction.
- •【HAMMER AS A GIFT】- A durable hammer is given to you. Weighing 44.1lbs(20 kg), the anvil can be transported easily.
- •【WIDE APPLICATION】- This anvil is perfect for metal-smiths, riveting, flattening, forging and forming metal, ideal for any handyman or hobbyist.
Happybuy Single Horn Anvil 44Lbs Steel Anvil Blacksmith for Sale Forge Tools and Equipment Anvil Rugged Round and Square Hole Horn Anvil Blacksmith Jewelers Metalsmith Blacksmith Tool
List Price: $165.74$149.17DEALYou Save: $16.57 (10%)
Free shippingFree Returns – 30 daysFree Order CancellationSecure Payment2–3 Days DeliveryGet It June 25, 2026In Stock (2)No marketing spamNo account requiredFulfilment by FedEx / Amazon / UPS / ShipwirePayPal / Card Buyer Protection
Customer Reviews
Reviews sourced from verified Amazon purchasers4.4
out of 5
Based on 10 reviews
5★
60%
4★
40%
3★
0%
2★
0%
1★
0%
Worth the money but...
Greg P✓ Verified Purchase•August 13, 2023
Actually for a cast steel anvil, it's a pretty good value for the money. Be aware, mine didn't look quite like the photo. The casting is pretty rough with lots of pits and apparently some voids. The largest are apparently hidden with bondo-type material, and all that is hidden under that hideous blue paint. However, it is an anvil and surface imperfections in the body will not hurt a thing assuming there is a nice flat surface. Which there is. The horn was a bit rough. I removed most all of the blue paint with a wire brush on an angle grinder. Then used a grinder and rounded the sharp edges, and smoothed out the rough spots on the horn, then put a sand/flap wheel and smoothed out the horn even more. Taped off the work surfaces and spray painted flat black on the body and covered the residual blue paint. I don't plan on anything heavy duty, the 66 pounder will do for me. NOTE; It may be worthwhile to check out Vevor's website, who is the outfit that imports this anvil I believe. Overall a good value for the money. People seem to think domestic antique anvils are priceless so this is a good alternative at a fraction of the cost.
Good for the price, few quirks.
Jacob Robinson✓ Verified Purchase•June 16, 2023
So I got one of these anvils not long after Old Hickory Forge posted his review video, mine came with some kind of clear coat on the face, (which I only noticed after trying the anvil the first time and the coating burned and stank) and the horn was painted, and still rough casting texture. I attacked the thing with a flap disc, got the coating off the face, dressed up the edges, The ring on the thing is fierce. Mounted down to my loose stump gets it tolerable, I think if I had a set stump it'd calm it down more. The pritchel hole is mostly worthless due to its location, but I did make some holdfasts that work in it. The hardy hole is a bit to close to the body of the anvil, so if you are punching through the hardy, your punch can hit the body/foot of the anvil and get stuck. Not world ending, but makes drifting a bit touchy.
I just made a bolster plate that works like a saddle to more or less let you use the hardy as a pritchel, will see how helpful that is.
Only real complaint is the location of the hardy/pritchel holes, and the horn on mine is kinda awkwardly fat, more like the toe of a boot instead of a cone. If I get fed up enough with the horn I may try and grind it down to a more useful shape.
All said, for starting out and working on smaller projects it is a perfectly acceptable starter anvil. The double horn really does come in handy for dealing with small pieces, and the price is hard to beat.
I just made a bolster plate that works like a saddle to more or less let you use the hardy as a pritchel, will see how helpful that is.
Only real complaint is the location of the hardy/pritchel holes, and the horn on mine is kinda awkwardly fat, more like the toe of a boot instead of a cone. If I get fed up enough with the horn I may try and grind it down to a more useful shape.
All said, for starting out and working on smaller projects it is a perfectly acceptable starter anvil. The double horn really does come in handy for dealing with small pieces, and the price is hard to beat.
Well constructed. Perfect for knife, sword, axe, horse shoes
John T. McDonald✓ Verified Purchase•June 11, 2023
I wasn't sure if this anvil would be big enough but it's just the right size for small and large projects.
Perfect
Azat✓ Verified Purchase•June 8, 2023
It is does the job
perfect for around the House
Mike✓ Verified Purchase•June 4, 2023
nice size for small projects. the shape is good for getting good angles
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