Thank you!!!! I found an axe head just like this one in the woods with all the same details blade chip's, side pits, and inside rust, all the UA-cam videos of axe restoration are just mild orange spot's here and there and they fix it up and make it sound like a huge accomplishment, and i didn't want to just grind away the pits and folding on the back of the axe head ,i want it to still hold character and age, all that I've done to it so far is wirebrush the first layer of rust off, this video set me in the direction i wanted to take with my axe .so thank you
woah i just found one of these exact same axe heads in the woods too!!!! and i was looking for a video on something extremely pitted and was surprised he had such a similar axe head to restore. have you found out who made it?
@@christopherrector7461 I think the one I found was a jersey axe, but I know exactly what you mean all these other videos on restoring axes are just have light orange surface rust and they do all this fancy stuff to it and I'm just like I could take a wire brush to that and get it looking good in like 5 minutes
Every small town in this country has a museum that greatly appreciates and honors donations of such old pieces of American rural history, yet I see so many videos of people totally destroying these beautiful antiques by grinding and polishing some historic find, attempting to make the object look new and spiffy. Thank you sir, for keeping the originality, the beauty, and the integrity of this very old piece of some early Americans life. You have given such honor to this old axe, I am sure the spirit of a long gone pioneer has looked upon you and smiled.
At first sight, I would have said that there were 4 hopes in saving this axe....... How wrong was I????? What a wonderful result. Thanks for sharing ATB
I have just received an axe exactly like yours. It was found inside a tree. Guess who ever left it leaning against it and the tree grew around it. Could that axe be used if you wanted too? Good enough shape?
Absolutely usable. After I trimmed some of the edges it's fine. It was for a friend though and he wanted it for a wall hanger so it won't get used, kinda sad.
My buddy found that axe metal detecting at a home place that had been abandoned for 100 years. He said it was 10 inches deep when he dug it up. Thanks for watching!
@@GreenridgeMetalWorks jesus. As soon as i saw the axe head i knew this would be a perfect restoration. Too much rust and time made that goal pretty impossible. But i actually like it. Shows character and history
I'm a huge fan of the finished product, looks great pitted. I'm not a fan of the word "restoration" being used to explain it... just my opinion, don't yell at me lol.
Most of the UA-cam audience searches for this type of video within the tool restoration genre. I realize the definition differs but virtually nobody searches for refurbishments, even when they are specially look for them. Please be understanding with UA-cam makers, without generalizing search terms most would not be able to deliver. Thanks for watching.
Thank you!!!! I found an axe head just like this one in the woods with all the same details blade chip's, side pits, and inside rust, all the UA-cam videos of axe restoration are just mild orange spot's here and there and they fix it up and make it sound like a huge accomplishment, and i didn't want to just grind away the pits and folding on the back of the axe head ,i want it to still hold character and age, all that I've done to it so far is wirebrush the first layer of rust off, this video set me in the direction i wanted to take with my axe .so thank you
woah i just found one of these exact same axe heads in the woods too!!!! and i was looking for a video on something extremely pitted and was surprised he had such a similar axe head to restore. have you found out who made it?
@@christopherrector7461 I think the one I found was a jersey axe, but I know exactly what you mean all these other videos on restoring axes are just have light orange surface rust and they do all this fancy stuff to it and I'm just like I could take a wire brush to that and get it looking good in like 5 minutes
Every small town in this country has a museum that greatly appreciates and honors donations of such old pieces of American rural history, yet I see so many videos of people totally destroying these beautiful antiques by grinding and polishing some historic find, attempting to make the object look new and spiffy. Thank you sir, for keeping the originality, the beauty, and the integrity of this very old piece of some early Americans life. You have given such honor to this old axe, I am sure the spirit of a long gone pioneer has looked upon you and smiled.
Well thank you very much!
Wow that looks amazing. I'm now temped to do the same to an old pick axe head I found buried in my garden.
Good that you left the century old pitting in place. So many guys ruin old axes making them mirror finish.
I agree, I really like the look. Thanks for watching!
I couldn’t agree more
Omg that's amazing, who would of thought that by removing all the rust and cleaning it that it would end up rust free and clean.. Unbelievable 👍
At first sight, I would have said that there were 4 hopes in saving this axe....... How wrong was I????? What a wonderful result. Thanks for sharing ATB
Several people told me that it was unfix-able, I took that as a challenge! Thanks for watching!
Glad you didn’t take it back to a smooth finish looks great with the pitting :) great job
Now that's a Maker's Mark
Excelente restauración, felicitaciones, saludos desde Nicaragua
Pitting is beautiful.
Thanks!
I've brought some stuff back from the dead, but damn!
😁😁😁😁
You did a really good job on that handle
Thanks!
Very guessed interpretation of the restoration.
Thanks for watching!
Cool project and Great job buddy 👍 Subscribed
Thanks a lot!
That poor axe head is going to resemble a saw blade.
When you have an axe to grind, you are serious about it!
Do you ever feel in the pits with weld then sand it
I have just received an axe exactly like yours. It was found inside a tree. Guess who ever left it leaning against it and the tree grew around it. Could that axe be used if you wanted too? Good enough shape?
Absolutely usable. After I trimmed some of the edges it's fine. It was for a friend though and he wanted it for a wall hanger so it won't get used, kinda sad.
Always amazing to watch a truly skilled craftsman at work.
15:46 stomach growling
It looks like a meteorite
Very nice.. Great job. Just did something like that. Love the texture on the Axe :)
I went from, "Why is he even doing this?" to, "Oh, I want that."
Thanks!
Great work!
I like that you left the pitting. On the other hand, my OCD wants it to be smoothen and mirror like. Nevertheless, great work!
Good job 👍
The axe handle cracked at the end of the video?
There is a dark streak in the wood that looks like a crack. Thanks for watching!
My thoughts at 8:05
You know, that axehead could use some resto work too, you know~
That was good
Wall art.
Was that thing first sandcast on a pebble beach. The texture is so bizarre. Nice work on it.
It was found buried by my friend when he went metal detecting.
Very interesting work David. I may have an interesting ax head for u to work your magic on if your interested. I’ll catch u at work some day
Bring it on!
Excelente
But those black spots and the middle part looking like rust, is that rust? Feel that should be smoothened too.
TOP RESTORATION JOB READY FOR THAT ZOMBIE ATTACK HEAD STRIKER.
Sweet. Would love to know how old that Axe head is.
My buddy found that axe metal detecting at a home place that had been abandoned for 100 years. He said it was 10 inches deep when he dug it up. Thanks for watching!
@@GreenridgeMetalWorks jesus. As soon as i saw the axe head i knew this would be a perfect restoration. Too much rust and time made that goal pretty impossible. But i actually like it. Shows character and history
Will it kill zombies x
perfect job .........with a metal meteorite ......errrr, I mean an axe head ......
At first it looked like freeze dried meat.
I suppose your right!😁
I'm a huge fan of the finished product, looks great pitted. I'm not a fan of the word "restoration" being used to explain it... just my opinion, don't yell at me lol.
Most of the UA-cam audience searches for this type of video within the tool restoration genre. I realize the definition differs but virtually nobody searches for refurbishments, even when they are specially look for them. Please be understanding with UA-cam makers, without generalizing search terms most would not be able to deliver. Thanks for watching.
какое не рационально использование древесины(((
Not restored
😝
Great work!