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Ore Dog Productions
United States
Приєднався 19 січ 2022
Ore Dog Productions was formed when seasoned blacksmiths Lee Sauder, Stephen Mankowski, Shel Browder, and Ken Koons documented the iron smelting process on video in 2000. Our enjoyment of working together developed into a partnership; Lee’s ore-sniffing dog, Shadow, was the inspiration for the production company name. The partnership's goal is to share our ongoing research and knowledge gained from years of experience.
Making Charcoal in a Barrel Kiln with Lee Sauder.
Ore Dog Production's Lee Sauder shows how to make charcoal from dry wood in a 55 gallon barrel kiln and explains how and why it works.
Переглядів: 4 736
Відео
Forging a copper tuyere with Lee Sauder.
Переглядів 2522 роки тому
Smelter/Blacksmith Lee Sauder demonstrates how to forge a copper tuyere that he uses in his smelting furnaces and forge. Video by Ken Koons/Ore Dog Productions. This is a short from the soon to be released video, "Between the Rock and a Hard Place : Forgotten Methods of Making Steel" by Ore Dog Productions. The processes documented here can be dangerous. The blacksmith, photographer, and Ore Do...
Forging Square Corners with Lee Sauder.
Переглядів 3372 роки тому
A slick, fast way to forge corners without welding. TECHNIQUE UPDATE: Ore Dog's Steve Mankowski has discovered that this works best if you hammer down the "pooch" AFTER opening the bend back up. The processes documented here can be dangerous. The blacksmith, photographer, and Ore Dog productions are not responsible for injuries or damage sustained when attempting the processes depicted in this ...
Making Charcoal in a Retort with Lee Sauder
Переглядів 1,9 тис.2 роки тому
This movie shows the construction and operation of a charcoal retort to make fuel for smelting, forging, or cooking. It is a fairly simple design built of scrap 275 gallon oil tanks. This retort will make 160 to 180 lbs of charcoal in about 6 hours. Cameo appearances by Shadow Bug the Amazing Ore Dog. The processes documented here can be dangerous. The blacksmith, photographer, and Ore Dog prod...
Iron ore sniffing dog.
Переглядів 1772 роки тому
Shadow Bug the iron ore sniffing dog helps blacksmiths find ore for smelting. An excerpt from the film Ore to Axe by Ken Koons.
Between the Rock and the Hard Place Trailer. Forgotten Methods of Turning Iron into Steel.
Переглядів 1632 роки тому
Ore Dog Blacksmiths demonstrate “Forgotten Methods of turning Iron into Steel” using four methods: Theophilus’ Method, Aristotle’s Method, Evenstad’s Method, and Quickie Cementation. With each method, a knife is made from bloom or wrought iron. Detailed information is given for each method, should the viewer wish to try it. To purchase a DVD of this movie visit, oredogproductions.com/between-th...
Between the Rock and the Hard Place Forgotten Methods of Turning Iron into Steel The Complete Movie.
Переглядів 5 тис.2 роки тому
Ore Dog Blacksmiths demonstrate “Forgotten Methods of turning Iron into Steel” using four methods: Theophilus’ Method, Aristotle’s Method, Evenstad’s Method, and Quickie Cementation. With each method, a knife is made from bloom or wrought iron. Detailed information is given for each method, should the viewer wish to try it. If you would like to purchase a DVD of this video visit oredogproductio...
Ore to Axe Trailer.
Переглядів 1452 роки тому
This documentary film details the process of smelting iron ore into metal and forging it into an eighteenth century-style axe. Follow blacksmiths with over 100 years’ collective experience as they demonstrate every step in the centuries-old bloomery smelting process. By combining earth, air, and fire, they create that “tool of necessity” used for generations. Oredog Blacksmiths Shelton Browder,...
Ore to Axe. The Complete Movie.
Переглядів 31 тис.2 роки тому
This documentary film details the process of smelting iron ore into metal and forging it into an eighteenth century-style axe. Follow blacksmiths with over 100 years’ collective experience as they demonstrate every step in the centuries-old bloomery smelting process. By combining earth, air, and fire, they create that “tool of necessity” used for generations. Oredog Blacksmiths Shelton Browder,...
Best bloomery smelting and forging video I've seen so far. Bravo, gentlemen, very well done.
One thing I hate about trying to put a new handle on a tool out where I live is all the tool handles I get an hour garbage they're not made of Hickory anymore. And it's too much work to try to adapt one so you might as well just buy a new axe unfortunately. I hate this throw away Society that's been created for tools
So you chopped down a tree in the forest to turn it into charcoal and Axe handles, and the newly created Ox then returns to the force to chop down more trees to turn more trees into charcoal and axe handles. The circle of life.
You can cut a hole in the top of the barrel lid and have non in the bottom have the fire outside. This heats the inside wood turning it into charcoal and gas. You get a lot more charcoal
8:42 primitive technology?????
😂😂😂😂❤❤❤
Learn all this now next respawn u might need it
11/10
Bravo and as always- Amazing and well done! Critical history is not always clean and academic- the techniques and technology is a hands on education. Beautiful and BRAVO gentlemen!
I would have loved to watch your documentary what are sole looked very interesting and you'll look very professional if it wasn't for that damn harmonic
1 Iron ore (2.00) 2 Charcoal (6.55) 3 Furnace (9.45) 4 Smelting (21.34) 5 Iron to steel (30.26) 6 The Axe (38.04) 7 Axe handle (47.09)
The amount of organisation and labour required to equip an army in centuries gone by, using methods like these, must have been truly epic.
Where are y’all located? I noticed the narrator has a southern accent. Kentucky? Tennessee? North Carolina?
Watching a lot of videos about bloom iron and steel, I did not find any as informative as this one. Also music, atmosphere, all very enjoyable. In the first method, Theophilus, how much time do you keep the knife with clay cover inside the fire white hot for reaching to adequate carbon?
@@devrimaydin4824 Thank you! It was left in the fire for about 10-15 minutes, its very thin with lots of surface area.
@@stephenmankowski3679 is that 10-15 minute from cold or from the surface reaching welding heat?
awesome stuff. I hope the algorithm picks up this video. This is amazing
You lads are the real deal for this historical recreation: preventing the old methods from being forgotten. Amazing film.
The dog: I have to do all the job here...
There's a couple of sources of Iron Ore. Banded Iron Formations or BIF's hold most of the Iron today. They formed during the Oxygen Catastrophe, when the world literally rusted. The ancient seas that were shallow then are now dry land today. Then there's bog iron which is formed when water from some source washes the iron out of rocks, including BIF's to low-lying areas that fill with water. Iron Bacteria precipitate this iron as iron hydroxide. Then Volcanic Iron. A volcanic eruption throws iron rich minerals onto the surface and it's eroded into black sand. This is how the Japanese got the metal for their katanas. Then there are meteorites which have been forged by man even before the Iron Age, when the primary metal was bronze. Iron bearing rocks can also wash out from ore beds upstream during a flood. Some iron bearing rocks can be brought out by glaciers and strewn across the landscape but harvesting them is not practical.
Holy metal Batman.
Great "how to video". These guys know what they are doing and do an excellent job explaining the process. Note how they hold the sledge when striking. I was taught this method by Francis Whitaker, who worked in Yelliins shop and rarely see it used. Also look at their shop and how their side draft forge pulls the smoke. No need for a hood.
@@ggilmoreyou Thank you!
smart dog❤
this good channel for learning keep it up thanks 🙏🇮🇩 i am from indonesia
Thanks so much for this video. It answered a huge question I had about the process of iron to steel. Other videos seem to just gloss over this part.
Great project documentary. I like to think most of us understand the primordial call of attempting to build essential technology from scratch (hence the broad appeal of the Primitive Technology channel)... but... as your film shows, inserting just a few modern upgrades in the process allows for superior and more predictable results, which end up being a bit more satisfying when coming out the other side. With only a few exceptions, modernizing the air blast variable is what most "build it from scratch like our ancestors would have" enthusiasts end up doing.
this looks fun, learning a lot over here. hope to make it my first tool from my forge this summer
Thank you! It is fun !
Can you add more wood to the top once it is half-burned, or would it not be fully carbonized by the time the vents need to be shut?
What rocks did you use
good movie, awesome music too.
47:08 - how long that process took in that particular case? Whole time, how much time was left to cool, and how long it took to make welding heat?
Nice!
I honestly can't tell if this is a joke. If it is, it is very funny.
the amount of sheer labor is incredible - amazing human men in 2022 still possess this knowledge
grog is any prefired ceramic material not just furnace lining.
Best charcoal video for me thanks for going in depth about the process 👍
Get an e-ssist electric trolley. They're really good for outdoor stuff. Essentially an electric, all terrain wheelbarrow.
Thanks for the tip!
Excellent discription! Enjoyed every minute.
Like this method, have tried a lot of different ways, pit, retort, sealed cans in stoves, etc. Going to give this a try. I have a lot of branch wood to clean up and this looks like a way I can do it without babysitting it the whole time.
@ore dog productions I wanted to ask you guys about this primitive channels. I’m thinking they’re mostly fake, but, after watching the process by you, I’m almost sure they are. I want to ask you because you know this subject very well and I’m sure you could give a definite answer. I can’t post links here, but, one of the channels that does a lot of iron and tools from it, is called, primitive skills. I’m not sure that you would even see this comment, but, if you do, I’ll be very grateful and honored to know what you think. Thanks in advance if you take the time.
WOW!! Just WOW!!!! 👍
This is so educational. Thank you
Excellent. Really adds perspective on the cost of this essential and ubiquitous tool 200+ years ago.
Probably would have been a good call to bring a backpack with you to gather 50 pounds of ore in the woods, rather than just bringing a flour sack with you lol
Hey, four guys, four flour sacks, share the load! If it works it works!
I didnt even know ore dogs were a thing. Makes sense as iron oxides definitely have a scent to them. That is insanely cool
true
I don't know why, but the blooper had me rib-ache laughing so hard.
Just made my own blast furnace, going to melt down some pre I found next week. Do I need to be concerned about the fire getting TOO hot?
I know it's been one year but I got to say, this is the most beautiful thing I've ever seen
Absolutely glued me to the screen. Well done
As a mechanical engineer its fascinating to see all the different process and the understanding of the material that the olf ones already have, thanks for the excellent video
48:52 "We have come full circle this has been a journey to understand the ancient means of making iron to reproduce that method and to generate a material that has not been available to western blacksmiths for nearly 200 years" ?!
Wrought iron probably
A fine example of the whole process, complete with the end product. Thank you, well done guys.