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Anvils

Anvils for workshop mounting — cast or forged bodies designed to take impact without walking across the bench. Used for forming, straightening, rivet setting, and any job where you need a solid mass behind the work. Face hardness and overall weight determine what the anvil can handle without dishing or ringing itself loose.

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  • 5kg Anvil for workshop use, ideal for metalworking and repair tasks.
    Not yet rated
    Sealey
    Bench Mounting Anvil
    • Cast iron construction
    • 115 x 68 mm work surface
    • 5 kg, bench mounting
    €53.21 €53.75
    €43.26 €43.70
  • Bench Mounting Anvil
    Not yet rated
    Sealey
    Bench Mounting Anvil
    • Cast iron construction
    • 170 × 90 mm working surface
    • Single bick, rectangular face
    €98.88 €99.88
    €80.39 €81.20

Bench-mounted anvils differ mainly in weight, face material, and how they fix down. Lighter castings (under 10 kg) suit panel work and light forming; heavier forged models (25 kg and up) absorb hammer energy better and stay put under repeated blows. The face should be harder than what you're working — a soft face will dish under chisel work or punch marks. Check the mounting slots: some anvils use through-bolts, others rely on a central stud. Through-bolt designs give a more rigid fix if your bench framing allows it.

Horn shape matters if you're doing any curved forming — a longer, tapered horn lets you work different radii without repositioning the piece. If the anvil's just for straightening or rivet setting, a short horn or no horn keeps the footprint smaller. Cast anvils are quieter under the hammer but can crack if you miss a blow onto an edge; forged bodies tolerate the occasional off-target hit better. Either way, mount the anvil so the face sits roughly at knuckle height when your arm hangs straight — that puts your shoulder behind the hammer stroke without hunching.