Try doing that job yourself and see how you like it when some clown comes along with a camera and makes it look like it's nothing just to save some time for a limp wristed office type
Such a gen z comment to make. Its important to witness this technique in real time to fully comprehend and appreciate the process and all of the nuances of his actions.
To be fair, the ancient alien theory says that men built the stuff with technology given to them by aliens. Also, some of the stone work in South America was done WAY before the Inca and it’s seriously some technical stuff.
Man where was this guy when I tried to break rocks for my fire pit? I just busted it with a sledgehammer but of course you get a completely random break. That’s a fascinating skill. I’d like to know how to do that.
I'm an old guy with a set of feathers and wedges. That's what the guy in the last vid used. Feathers are kinda half moon shaped shafts that you put into your drilled holes, then place the wedge between them. I've never had to pound hard on the wedges like he did. I just use a 3 Lb hammer and hit each wedge in a row. more than a tap, but no need to kill yourself doing it. When the rock begins to weaken, the sound of the hits change pitch. I think it's fun. But then again, I like splitting firewood too. You can still buy feathers and wedges.
@@thomaskolb8785 lol no, modernized companies use machines to do this, search on youtube you will see them cutting out of a mountain massive squares then slicing them up with a machine into sheets
I’m presuming that when he removes certain stakes that it’s already began to show cracking. It would be nice to see from a close camera angle to see how this is happening. Never the less fantastic video of a man at work!
he removes the stakes so that when the stone splits, they don't fall down the crack, and become very difficult to retrieve. and you can tell when it's about to go by listening to change in sound.
by putting them all in and hammering each, then removing the loose ones, he leaves only the ones that are in a spot that needs to be weakened, and then repeats the process, removing the loose ones each time, this way he creates a fault line, the crack goes along the entire boulder, and he makes it bigger each time he weakens the strongest remaining points until the last pin(s) remain and the boulders structure fails, allowing it to split
I've used the technique shown at 6:55 to cut concrete garden edgers. I used a claw hammer to hit a wedge-shaped hammer like the one in the video. After doing it on multiple garden projects, I learned why you shouldn't hit two hardened steel heads together. A piece of the claw hammer head the size of a large BB spalled at what must have been the speed of a bullet, penetrated several inches into the left side of my chest, and came to rest outside one of my ribs. It's still there. Not long after that I found a replay of the TV show Mythbusters, where they "proved" that it couldn't happen.
That`s the way we cut small stone hear but you should use the right kind of hammers that are not hardened like a claw hammer ,even the right kind of hammers will splinter if they are used after they start mushrooming on the strike face.
friend of mine had the same sort of thing happen only the shard went into his eye and embedded itself inside his eye ball several ops later he got part of his sight back but not all, the use of a hammer is ok but the "hit" item shouldn't have a hardened face that you are hitting, as per a cold chisel only the cutting edge needs hardened, as for Mythbusters several of their "solutions" were rubbish, some were useful though. Also this shows you don't need to be an alien to cut rock accurately just skilful.
Tout mon respect pour ces hommes qui travaillent la pierre :) et encore plus pour ceux qui l'ont travaillé au temps de l'Egypte antique ( par exemplke ) sans tractopelle pour les aider. Cela reste un savoir faire qui m'impressione beaucoup. J'ai toujours eu une admiration inconditionnelle pour les personnes travaillant de leurs mains et réalisant des choses incroyables.
Планета захвачена сероводородными пришельцами ,и именно они построили пирамиды. Пирамиды это накопители энергии ,и нашу энергию передают этим тварям пришельцам..... серый питаются гаввахом (негативом) Кстати он управляют планетов через масонов и т.д. и они снимают смешные фильмы про инопланетян ,чтобы в головах людей вся космическая тема выглядела бредом Посмотрите Уфолога Бову(русский автор) или Дейвида Айка ,Кэмерон Дэй .....
This is very old technology, before iron, the tools were bronze, before bronze they were arsenic hardened copper. But still some thing to watch the skill of the mason and be amazed at seeing rock split along their line, it never get old!
the hardest part of the whole mess is starting the holes, after that, even the Mesoamericans would insert dry wood into them and soak them to the same effect
I think the the inner caveman in me wants to be a rockminer, hearing the sounds of metal and rock echoing is like a little song each one sounds different
In south india, near bangalore. The distance between the holes are about 4-5 feet. The chisels are used to seal the hole. Then they set fire on the surface. The trapped air expands ,opening a crack. Here we have a sheet of grey granite, kilometers in length.
Amazing! Thanks for the knowledge. It made me wonder how the Egyptian's worked granite using copper tools. Apparently they used copper saws with some sand like material lubricant. This dude split this stone almost in no time and the copper saw method might have taken a month 24/7.
Камень хрупкий, не такой вязкий как металл. Медной пилой достаточно создать зону напряжения, а дальше справится и каменное и бронзовом зубило. Древние египтяне создали технологию обработки камня по принципу конвейера, на каждом этапе работали и профессионалы и ученики. Черновую работу делали ученики при этом финишную доводку делали профессионалы. Эта казалось бы простые технологии и втоже время совершенные, гораздо интересней, чем мифические истории про инопланетян.
@@Alex-qf2lb You see those same type of marks in quarrying and mining from as late as the Victorian era that we know absolutely were made by hand picks and adzes. I've seen them in both books and videos.
@@Alex-qf2lb Here are a couple of articles about Egyptian quarry methods and how they progressed. They cover pick marks, separation trenches, and desscending platforms. stone-extraction-with-pickaxes-in-ancient-egypt-fact-or-fiction new-ways-of-looking-at-highly-organised-stone-quarrying-in-ancient-egypt I can't post them as direct links but you'll figure it out. Just copy paste into google and you should find the articles.
@@Alex-qf2lb Here are a couple of articles about Egyptian quarry methods and how they progressed. They cover pick marks, separation trenches, and descending platforms. stone-extraction-with-pickaxes-in-ancient-egypt-fact-or-fiction new-ways-of-looking-at-highly-organised-stone-quarrying-in-ancient-egypt I can't post them as direct links but you'll figure it out. Just copy paste into a search engine and you should find the articles.
@@firstlineinvestor ну там на дисках алмазы только в названиях.. Да даже эту технологию можно автоматизировать. Но качество хуже чем просто рез. Кроме того есть насадка на трактора с гидромолотом. А эта технология интересна как вариант если тебе надо каменюку разбить и вывезти со двора. Но никак не в производстве...
This are not straight just close to flat Unlike the granite walls in Egypt or the blocks of pumapumku that are perfect flat, the difference is huuuuuge!
Don't forget that the ancients didn't have power tools, or even steel tools. Let's see someone modern do it with copper, bronze and wood. Aliens probably didn't do it, but someone with more science than we're told did.
@@privatename5788 OK, this debate is idiotic. You can perfectly happily dress stone with bronze tools, as people have been doing for centuries. Stonework in the pyramids (for instance) bears all the tool marks of exactly this kind of process. "Someone with more science than we're told" is a completely unnecessary conclusion, contradicted by physical evidence... and also flat out barmy.
Stonemasonry is one of the world's oldest trades, and one of a relative few that haven't been displaced or greatly altered by technology. The metallurgy of the tools has improved, but the fundamental techniques haven't changed in thousands of years.
"It's an impressive start, but a bit rough at the edges" said the apprentice to his site manager. "It's a crying shame they haven't found my 8,000 year old instruction manual" replied the Egyptian Giza pyramids site manager.
@@smotrovoy Ещё была версия что в отверстия заливалась вода перед морозами... Но тебе походу объяснять и нет смысла...) 🤣😉🤸♀️Больше не пиши если на отвечу, значит нет смысла тебе🤣
What they never tell you is that granite splitting is way easier than layered and softer stones, which may require feathers and wedges of over half a metre long in the worst scenario, or even longer still. Whereas granite can be split with just short chisels in a precarved or precut slit, and still result in a very straight split
The ancient alien videos swear the primitive natives could not have split huge boulders without modern tech. I think we might be on to something here...
I mean... The machine is making it fast more than technique. Imagine doing this by hand... and building a pyramid. Then again you'd have 10 skilled artisans 20 apprentices and 100 slaves in addition to the foreman in charge. This is one man.
Just imagine how fast it would go if for every hole one man would beat a hammer continually! The stone would snap in one minute. Probably that is how the ancient Egyptians did it for building the pyramids!
Actually, it helps to have patience with splitting stone, I have used plug and feather to split many boulders, pound wedges in.... nothing.... walk away back to truck, 5-10 min later and pop. There it goes
@@teddydibiase4078 hey someone who knows something about rocks. Geologist here. I appreciate your understanding of the Earth we live on. Patience is the key when it comes to nature.
Perfect example how material fatigue works and is exploited by worker. Repeated shock in certain direction weaks crystal structures, chisels adds constant force for splitting weakened material. Physics never fail.
Это точно! начал беседку по 120р м\п пару дней не напрягаясь делаю не хватило немного поехал уже 187р м\п еще пару дней 270р м\п эт я про железо а про USB панель вообще молчу брал 580р лист две недели прошло думаю брать не буду вроде по 1500р но спрошу цену 2150р лист)))!!!!!!!!!!!!!
dude, the main process is still by hand you dingus. The splitting of the rock is only done by the chisels pushing apart the rock, using machinery to move it or get it started just speeds up the prep work.
Такая техника ровного раскалывания больших каменных монолитов могла применяться еще тогда, когда еще небыли созданы мощные механизмы современного типа. Спасибо автору этого видео.
Ancient aliens "no ancient human could cut stone this accurately" modern-day stone mason yep they definitely didn't have hammers or wedges in ancient times.
back in the time where its confusing, steel wasn't available yet. In order to use a wedge, you need a hole, and you aren't drilling a hole with copper. Thats pretty much their point. Ive been splitting stone like this for 40 years, but i have carbide drill bits
rockets4kids yea? you ever use bronze drill bits? You ever use a star drill made of bronze? Have you ever drilled a 1" hole in granite using a hammer? The answer is no, so stay in your lane.
yea i want to see him put on his safety glasses. Insurance payments are a business killer. if he gets injured by not wearing safety, the boss may miss a mercedes payment.
Actually... You're pretty close! A great modern-ish example is the Salt Lake City Temple. It took them about 40 years, starting in 1853 using oxen to haul mammoth blocks of hand carved granite like in this video, 15 miles down a canyon and across the valley to the building site. Crazy amount of work! I'm not sure how many people worked on it though.
Yep. Dynamite made the splitting a lot faster but drilling those holes was serious work. One labor saving version you just drill the holes, insert wooden pegs, and soak them. The wood expanding creates enough pressure to break the stone along the weakness created by the holes you drilled.
Centuries old technique, except the holes were drilled by hand back then just so you know and I used to work for a stone mason, as the rock splits, one well experienced in, can actually hear the tone of the rock change when hit, as cracks
как бывший экскаваторщик авторитетно заявляю-чел еще после вчерашнего не опохмелимши.а когда опохмелится дейсвия ковша могут быть неточными,но они будут плавными и без зависаний.
It's really nothing shows. Some stone processing traces of ancient megalithic buildings show that we have no idea what kind of instrument ancient builders used and who they were.
Por supuesto . Con un martillo percutor neumatico y una retroescavadora cualquiera puede hacerlo. Solo hace falta una grúa de alta carga y listo, pan comido
@@victorlavignasse1849 no, parece facil, pero creo que hay que aprender a "escuchar" los sonidos que producen las piedras al golpearlas asi como saber por y donde comenzar a golpearlas, saludos
I think stone splitting is my new favourite thing on UA-cam. Wood turning videos had a good run during the pandemic but want to try new things now. 😁
ME TOO ! FOR REAL ! So funny! Thanks ! 4723
LOL
2:50 my man’s playing the most underrated instrument… the Boulder
After a single recital you get full body pain for five days.
I thought i was the only one who noticed that 😂
Its not just a Boulder 🥺
Its a rock!
Judicious use of time-lapse in long repetitive processes is a good thing in vids.
Try doing that job yourself and see how you like it when some clown comes along with a camera and makes it look like it's nothing just to save some time for a limp wristed office type
Now think about the pyramids…
Diamond Pyramid
Stone Pyramid
Such a gen z comment to make. Its important to witness this technique in real time to fully comprehend and appreciate the process and all of the nuances of his actions.
5:40 is when he cracked the first one
12:05 the second one
Imagine waking up to a weird "tink tink tink" sound and you go out to see what's going on and the village's bolder is cut perfectly down the middle
We have a village boulder - no kidding. Its a big boulder and a smaller boulder.
What could be bolder
I love how carefully yet confidently this worker walks around on the boulder.
He can feel if it is starting to break and the shape is one unlikely to make violent changes
ㄹ
I feel a back ache coming..... Nevertheless, respect for this worker.
Same feeling
Which one?
I feel a toe ache coming. OSHA? We don’t need no stinking OSHA!
As a roofer ,how often does your back hurt?
Me : yes
Can you imagine the Egyptians doing this 4500 years ago?
Поставил скорость воспроизведения × 2 и Работа мужика реально в два раза быстрее пошла))))
Спасибо за совет
Буду всегда так перед началом дел делать, спасибо
И заработок тоже.
2 minutes in my back gave out! Kudos to this craftsman for this fine work!
exercise and practice, these guys do this all day
A few centuries later, a researcher examines the stone cut and concludes it was done by aliens with laser technology.
Exactly 💯
Not a researcher, TV shows like Discovery, National Geographic.
To be fair, the ancient alien theory says that men built the stuff with technology given to them by aliens. Also, some of the stone work in South America was done WAY before the Inca and it’s seriously some technical stuff.
Except he is not using copper tools.
And he I not showing how you cut something from bedrock that ways over 50 tons.
Man where was this guy when I tried to break rocks for my fire pit? I just busted it with a sledgehammer but of course you get a completely random break. That’s a fascinating skill. I’d like to know how to do that.
I'm an old guy with a set of feathers and wedges. That's what the guy in the last vid used. Feathers are kinda half moon shaped shafts that you put into your drilled holes, then place the wedge between them. I've never had to pound hard on the wedges like he did. I just use a 3 Lb hammer and hit each wedge in a row. more than a tap, but no need to kill yourself doing it. When the rock begins to weaken, the sound of the hits change pitch. I think it's fun. But then again, I like splitting firewood too. You can still buy feathers and wedges.
Try the Stone Trust, they have instructional videos and run courses
It's almost like he's hammering out a tune. Brilliant work 👍
This is possibly the worst job I can imagine. Serious and permament hearing loss, just for people to have nice kitchen countertops.
@@thomaskolb8785 lol no, modernized companies use machines to do this, search on youtube you will see them cutting out of a mountain massive squares then slicing them up with a machine into sheets
i'd rate this right up there with watching ants build a mound, a lawn being fertilized or clouds evaporating. i loved it.
You oughta check out cow’s hooves being trimmed too, surprisingly therapeutic..
I’m presuming that when he removes certain stakes that it’s already began to show cracking. It would be nice to see from a close camera angle to see how this is happening. Never the less fantastic video of a man at work!
he removes the stakes so that when the stone splits, they don't fall down the crack, and become very difficult to retrieve.
and you can tell when it's about to go by listening to change in sound.
by putting them all in and hammering each, then removing the loose ones, he leaves only the ones that are in a spot that needs to be weakened, and then repeats the process, removing the loose ones each time, this way he creates a fault line, the crack goes along the entire boulder, and he makes it bigger each time he weakens the strongest remaining points until the last pin(s) remain and the boulders structure fails, allowing it to split
The Egyptians drilled holes, then filled the holes with cedar and water.
The wood expanded over night and did the cracking. Less work, more smarts.
Is this true?
@@gunnarneumann8321 Anybody don't know. Need to check.
@@gunnarneumann8321 yes
Large stones for Ancient Indian temples are breaked by that method
@@praveenkrishnar7872 thank you 😊
Дааа ручная совсем ручная!!!!
Лол, а ты ждал, что он камни кулаками крошить будет? Ручная вышивка тоже так-то не нитки пальцами плести.
I've used the technique shown at 6:55 to cut concrete garden edgers. I used a claw hammer to hit a wedge-shaped hammer like the one in the video. After doing it on multiple garden projects, I learned why you shouldn't hit two hardened steel heads together. A piece of the claw hammer head the size of a large BB spalled at what must have been the speed of a bullet, penetrated several inches into the left side of my chest, and came to rest outside one of my ribs. It's still there. Not long after that I found a replay of the TV show Mythbusters, where they "proved" that it couldn't happen.
they only use new tools so they don't see the actual effects of worn out tools breaking.
That`s the way we cut small stone hear but you should use the right kind of hammers that are not hardened like a claw hammer ,even the right kind of hammers will splinter if they are used after they start mushrooming on the strike face.
friend of mine had the same sort of thing happen only the shard went into his eye and embedded itself inside his eye ball several ops later he got part of his sight back but not all, the use of a hammer is ok but the "hit" item shouldn't have a hardened face that you are hitting, as per a cold chisel only the cutting edge needs hardened, as for Mythbusters several of their "solutions" were rubbish, some were useful though. Also this shows you don't need to be an alien to cut rock accurately just skilful.
Да уж - удивительная техника, простая и непринужденная, не зря на каторгу в каменоломни отправляли...
На каторгу отправляли таскать камни, а не перерабатывать.
@@AntiCommunist11 и где вы увидели обработку? Здесь показано как камень ломают...
@@AntiCommunist11 куда надо, туда и посылали))
Was a great video, right up till the music started.
I’m still trying to name that tune.
Tout mon respect pour ces hommes qui travaillent la pierre :) et encore plus pour ceux qui l'ont travaillé au temps de l'Egypte antique ( par exemplke ) sans tractopelle pour les aider. Cela reste un savoir faire qui m'impressione beaucoup. J'ai toujours eu une admiration inconditionnelle pour les personnes travaillant de leurs mains et réalisant des choses incroyables.
Je parle juste un peu de français mais je comprends!
@@beaub152 Si tu travailles de tes mains, tu as toute mon admiration :) Ton français est trés bien.
Tu peux visiter le chateau Guédelon.
Планета захвачена сероводородными пришельцами ,и именно они построили пирамиды.
Пирамиды это накопители энергии ,и нашу энергию передают этим тварям пришельцам..... серый питаются гаввахом (негативом)
Кстати он управляют планетов через масонов и т.д. и они снимают смешные фильмы про инопланетян ,чтобы в головах людей вся космическая тема выглядела бредом
Посмотрите Уфолога Бову(русский автор) или Дейвида Айка ,Кэмерон Дэй .....
Egypt have no stone like those they were bought from outside the country
This is very old technology, before iron, the tools were bronze, before bronze they were arsenic hardened copper. But still some thing to watch the skill of the mason and be amazed at seeing rock split along their line, it never get old!
the hardest part of the whole mess is starting the holes, after that, even the Mesoamericans would insert dry wood into them and soak them to the same effect
Nature: It took me millions of years to make that !
and a morning to remove achunk
La inteligencia y fortaleza del hombre es infinita... siempre termina venciendo cualquier dificulta...
I think the the inner caveman in me wants to be a rockminer, hearing the sounds of metal and rock echoing is like a little song each one sounds different
Yeah sure till the tinnitus kicks in lol.
@@aaronmackay6123 that’s the music I miss dude
@@daveis2gr8
Unsure how to interpret that.
@@aaronmackay6123 what sorry I can’t hear you I have this constant ringing in my ears I don’t know what it is
Yeah me too.. But my outer modern man suffers from backache when i bend over to pick up a pen that's on the floor.🤣
I feel sorry for the dude at the bar who mistakes these guys for some skinny pushovers 😂
lots of brown hands touches the granite before a white master does.
@@bidensucsbigdickskalmadrin6877 cool story bro
@@bidensucsbigdickskalmadrin6877 he is east asian, so anyone not european Is automatically brown, damn don't know if they would like to hear that
@@NosActivated420 white is right homeboy
@@NosActivated420 u believe in packing a mans peanut butter wearing rainbow necklace .🤣😂
In south india, near bangalore. The distance between the holes are about 4-5 feet. The chisels are used to seal the hole. Then they set fire on the surface. The trapped air expands ,opening a crack. Here we have a sheet of grey granite, kilometers in length.
Amazing! Thanks for the knowledge. It made me wonder how the Egyptian's worked granite using copper tools. Apparently they used copper saws with some sand like material lubricant. This dude split this stone almost in no time and the copper saw method might have taken a month 24/7.
But... aliens...
Камень хрупкий, не такой вязкий как металл. Медной пилой достаточно создать зону напряжения, а дальше справится и каменное и бронзовом зубило. Древние египтяне создали технологию обработки камня по принципу конвейера, на каждом этапе работали и профессионалы и ученики. Черновую работу делали ученики при этом финишную доводку делали профессионалы. Эта казалось бы простые технологии и втоже время совершенные, гораздо интересней, чем мифические истории про инопланетян.
@@Alex-qf2lb You see those same type of marks in quarrying and mining from as late as the Victorian era that we know absolutely were made by hand picks and adzes.
I've seen them in both books and videos.
@@Alex-qf2lb Here are a couple of articles about Egyptian quarry methods and how they progressed.
They cover pick marks, separation trenches, and
desscending platforms.
stone-extraction-with-pickaxes-in-ancient-egypt-fact-or-fiction
new-ways-of-looking-at-highly-organised-stone-quarrying-in-ancient-egypt
I can't post them as direct links but you'll figure it out. Just copy paste into google and you should find the articles.
@@Alex-qf2lb Here are a couple of articles about Egyptian quarry methods and how they progressed. They cover pick marks, separation trenches, and descending platforms.
stone-extraction-with-pickaxes-in-ancient-egypt-fact-or-fiction
new-ways-of-looking-at-highly-organised-stone-quarrying-in-ancient-egypt
I can't post them as direct links but you'll figure it out. Just copy paste into a search engine and you should find the articles.
Don't worry. The "Miners Union" will take care of your family.
That crane moved like it was King Kong in his first movie
haha perfect
Такая "Удивительная самая быстрая техника", что я ОХУЕЛ!!!
Это же надо - всего то 21 век, а уже ТАКОЕ!
@@firstlineinvestor ага а производительность то какова...
@@firstlineinvestor ну там на дисках алмазы только в названиях.. Да даже эту технологию можно автоматизировать. Но качество хуже чем просто рез. Кроме того есть насадка на трактора с гидромолотом. А эта технология интересна как вариант если тебе надо каменюку разбить и вывезти со двора. Но никак не в производстве...
Эта техника в СССР применялась еще в прошлом веке,ничего УДИВИТЕЛЬНОГО, простая ФИЗИКА
Или под осень с водичкой. Весна и готово.
i was in the midst of a bad acid trip, 300 ug peaking and this video brought me back!! thank you
*2:47** Do, Re, Mi, Fa, Sol, La, Si...............*
God of high cshool my boi where were all this time (genius)
No, actually not... Some hit are out of tune
@@dryverw true
And some people say "ooo~ the stone is so straight. That must be alien technology."
not saying it was aliens but theres a bit more to the argument than that )
This are not straight just close to flat
Unlike the granite walls in Egypt or the blocks of pumapumku that are perfect flat, the difference is huuuuuge!
@@andresgalviz315 The difference is chiselling and grinding the surface after you've split it. Not rocket science.
Don't forget that the ancients didn't have power tools, or even steel tools. Let's see someone modern do it with copper, bronze and wood. Aliens probably didn't do it, but someone with more science than we're told did.
@@privatename5788 OK, this debate is idiotic. You can perfectly happily dress stone with bronze tools, as people have been doing for centuries. Stonework in the pyramids (for instance) bears all the tool marks of exactly this kind of process. "Someone with more science than we're told" is a completely unnecessary conclusion, contradicted by physical evidence... and also flat out barmy.
Stonemasonry is one of the world's oldest trades, and one of a relative few that haven't been displaced or greatly altered by technology. The metallurgy of the tools has improved, but the fundamental techniques haven't changed in thousands of years.
"Amazing Hand Granite Rock Mining Skill"
*Proceeds to use a Pneumatic Hammer*
Just spent 15 minutes watching some guys hammer rocks 😳I think I've lost the plot lol ❤️👍
thumbnail and video dose not match
filter the rock dust out ✔
hearing protection ❌
Where is his EAR PROTECTION?!
Fresh air and exercise. An honest day’s work. Thank you gentlemen.
Вот если бы действительно ручная..а тут он её отбойным молотком..
Если-бы древние египтяне так быстро кололи камни то они бы пирамиды до сих пор строили бы!⚠
пирамиды в основном сложены из известняка который мягче и брался считай около самих пирамид и потом работал там не один человек а очень много людей
"It's an impressive start, but a bit rough at the edges" said the apprentice to his site manager.
"It's a crying shame they haven't found my 8,000 year old instruction manual" replied the Egyptian Giza pyramids site manager.
i was thinking the same thing and they only took 20 to 3o years to build 1 pyramid out of this and copper lmao
The accuracy with the sledgie, it ain’t his first rodeo 🇦🇺
My father has a small piece of railroad track (20 pounds or so) my grandfather used a cold chisel to split of just like this rock!
This man got some crazy sledge accuracy!
Помню искал финские видео...
А здесь всё доходчиво увидел!.. 👍
Вопрос по сверлению только, что то быстро, мелко и не ровно! Как, так то?🙄
Да, ебашить кувалдой по камню - это ноухау фин, но, наконец, все доходчиво показали!!!
Мы же думали надо писюном бить, а тут такая магия - молоток!
@@smotrovoy Ещё была версия что в отверстия заливалась вода перед морозами... Но тебе походу объяснять и нет смысла...) 🤣😉🤸♀️Больше не пиши если на отвечу, значит нет смысла тебе🤣
@@Shant228 "в отверстия заливалась вода перед морозами": а-ху-еть! Магия!
Но тебе походу объяснять и нет смысла...) 🤣😉🤸♀️
@@smotrovoy сейчас ты полетишь от сюда нафуй смотри 🤸♀️
What they never tell you is that granite splitting is way easier than layered and softer stones, which may require feathers and wedges of over half a metre long in the worst scenario, or even longer still. Whereas granite can be split with just short chisels in a precarved or precut slit, and still result in a very straight split
Как быстро и просто)))
The ancient alien videos swear the primitive natives could not have split huge boulders without modern tech. I think we might be on to something here...
Hes gone so deaf over the years he didnt wear the noise cancellers for the hammering bit...shame.
Plugs maybe
Probably so he can hear the pitch change as he strikes
I mean... The machine is making it fast more than technique.
Imagine doing this by hand... and building a pyramid.
Then again you'd have 10 skilled artisans 20 apprentices and 100 slaves in addition to the foreman in charge. This is one man.
Just imagine how fast it would go if for every hole one man would beat a hammer continually! The stone would snap in one minute. Probably that is how the ancient Egyptians did it for building the pyramids!
True. This video title is clickbait though. There are hydraulic machines that can do this way faster and far more accurately.
Actually, it helps to have patience with splitting stone, I have used plug and feather to split many boulders, pound wedges in.... nothing.... walk away back to truck, 5-10 min later and pop. There it goes
@@teddydibiase4078 hey someone who knows something about rocks. Geologist here. I appreciate your understanding of the Earth we live on. Patience is the key when it comes to nature.
The change of sound around 4:35 is amazing.
"it must of been aliens"
some dude with a hammer
Perfect example how material fatigue works and is exploited by worker. Repeated shock in certain direction weaks crystal structures, chisels adds constant force for splitting weakened material. Physics never fail.
Аа, значит у египтян были перфораторы. Ну тогда понятно))
Да и камушки в Египте не много побольше.
Были конечно, только вот электричества не было. Они ими вручную долбили))
@@ГригорийСенев были пневматические отбойные молотки, компрессоров правда тогда не было поэтому паре десяткам рабов приходилось качать огромные меха.
учиться у этих мужиков надо.стройматериалы подорожали.только камень и остался.вдруг приспичит фазенду построить!
Это точно! начал беседку по 120р м\п пару дней не напрягаясь делаю не хватило немного поехал уже 187р м\п еще пару дней 270р м\п эт я про железо а про USB панель вообще молчу брал 580р лист две недели прошло думаю брать не буду вроде по 1500р но спрошу цену 2150р лист)))!!!!!!!!!!!!!
@@Дмитрий-х4й1я надыбал пивные кеги.навсякий случай собираю.ту же беседочку можно временно прикрыть.видимо возвращаемся в каменный век.
- Amazing Hand Rock Mining Skill
- Uses drill and then a digger
Yep, exactly like our ancient ancestors used to...
dude, the main process is still by hand you dingus. The splitting of the rock is only done by the chisels pushing apart the rock, using machinery to move it or get it started just speeds up the prep work.
Mantap sekali cara membelah batu dengan cara modern , kalau alat tradisional bisa - bisa punggung yang sakit🙏🙏🙏
Man, I can barely hit a nail on the head a few times without missing....this dude hits like 30 in a row while moving...
It is his job so he probably has more practice/experience then you do
Some times we strip pallets down and it 's surprisingly hard to knock a nail backwards through a piece! lol.
Такая техника ровного раскалывания больших каменных монолитов могла применяться еще тогда, когда еще небыли созданы мощные механизмы современного типа. Спасибо автору этого видео.
Ancient aliens "no ancient human could cut stone this accurately" modern-day stone mason yep they definitely didn't have hammers or wedges in ancient times.
back in the time where its confusing, steel wasn't available yet. In order to use a wedge, you need a hole, and you aren't drilling a hole with copper.
Thats pretty much their point. Ive been splitting stone like this for 40 years, but i have carbide drill bits
@@user-dq7ms8ir4c Carbide tooling only makes the job go faster. It can be done just fine with bronze, it merely takes longer.
rockets4kids yea? you ever use bronze drill bits? You ever use a star drill made of bronze? Have you ever drilled a 1" hole in granite using a hammer?
The answer is no, so stay in your lane.
ted - 😂😂😂
yea i want to see him put on his safety glasses. Insurance payments are a business killer. if he gets injured by not wearing safety, the boss may miss a mercedes payment.
In India, hindhus had done this technology before thousands of years back. 👍👍
Прикольный ксилофон )))
Фальшифит малостт
5:36 WOW. This man completely MASTERS his job. So impressive 👍
Покажи такой камень даргинцу он из неё кирпичи сделает ещё и с рисунком
*Excellent video 🤗🤗🤗*
Bruh, he split the giant stone faster than the small one. lol
The bigger one had jump cuts
Only need 500 men doing this all day everyday and you can build a cathedral in 50yrs !
More like 100.
Actually... You're pretty close! A great modern-ish example is the Salt Lake City Temple. It took them about 40 years, starting in 1853 using oxen to haul mammoth blocks of hand carved granite like in this video, 15 miles down a canyon and across the valley to the building site. Crazy amount of work! I'm not sure how many people worked on it though.
И давно это применение ОТБОЙНИКА стало приравниваться к навыку РУЧНОЙ работы? O_o
I feel like people have been cutting rocks open like this for centuries but it's just now been recognized by the internet
Yep. Dynamite made the splitting a lot faster but drilling those holes was serious work. One labor saving version you just drill the holes, insert wooden pegs, and soak them. The wood expanding creates enough pressure to break the stone along the weakness created by the holes you drilled.
Классно! А для чего их колят - европейцы новые пирамиды Хиопса построить захотели?)
Centuries old technique, except the holes were drilled by hand back then
just so you know and I used to work for a stone mason, as the rock splits, one well experienced in, can actually hear the tone of the rock change when hit, as cracks
Yep and you`ll learn the best place to split a stone or where it will leave the best look when split.
5:39 ... annnnnnnnnnnnnnd, thats a wrap... lets get out of were! Jooooooooooe Bring the Caterpillar!
Maestros canteros como este señor, son artistas de la mampostería natural.
Эксклваторщик вроде бухой
Зарядил с утреца поллитровку
как бывший экскаваторщик авторитетно заявляю-чел еще после вчерашнего не опохмелимши.а когда опохмелится дейсвия ковша могут быть неточными,но они будут плавными и без зависаний.
Thrilling video and a real climax at the end ! Well done! Thanks! 4723
I now know how the ancient stones were split with a laser like precision
Nice sound like music 🎶bless you mate
Внешне кажется что это легко, но это обманчиво, очень тяжёлый труд.
Проще резать размягчителем материи...Мы всегда резали скалы, только, им..Давно, правда, было...до вашей " новой эры".. в мексике...😂😅🤣
Я то думал ударом карате все сделают...
...genialer Handwerker und Neobachter der x-tsend alten Natur !!! Hochschtungsvolle Grüsse und Kompliment aus der Schweiz !!!!
Old technique but is still useful.
I think I never complain about back pain any more.
Виид вошёл в чат)
П.с. Легендарный лунный скульптор кто не понял.
Damn, that is what I needed to know. I would be so much further ahead in life today.
In ancient China they burnt the rock then instantly poured water on it.
U can also use dry wood in holes or cracks then pour water on
Around the world water has been used to split stone
Play it in 2x speed and still it feels slow, watch it while forwading
There you go Mr. Tut , now we do this a million more times and stack all the rocks into a big pile . We'll call it a pyramid , got it ?
What, you want a power drill? Nah, not invented yet. You just do it all by hand.
Now if only they got a video showing us how to stack it like a pyramid.
My fellow posters r prettysure aliens helped ancient egyptians. My fellow posters not so right
Honestly they are destroying rocks that have been forming over thousands of years. What a tragedy.
Uhh.. New age titty baby. Cannot make an omelet without cracking a few eggs.
Also gonna add to global warming, and rising ocean levels. Get over it.
Быстро только Стаханов уголь колол, а я пока смотрел шашлык сжëг. Особенно мужик с молотком шустрый.
It's simple with iron. Pre-iron I understand it was just a bit slower, but less effort hammering, by getting wet wood swole in the hole.
Оооо-очень быстро.)))
Quite fascinating.
A proper job.
bueno, esto demuestra que no fueron aliens con rayos laser los que cortaron tan liso el granito de las construcciones de los egipcios o incas XD
It's really nothing shows. Some stone processing traces of ancient megalithic buildings show that we have no idea what kind of instrument ancient builders used and who they were.
Por supuesto . Con un martillo percutor neumatico y una retroescavadora cualquiera puede hacerlo. Solo hace falta una grúa de alta carga y listo, pan comido
@@victorlavignasse1849 no, parece facil, pero creo que hay que aprender a "escuchar" los sonidos que producen las piedras al golpearlas asi como saber por y donde comenzar a golpearlas, saludos
@@victorlavignasse1849 lo hacian cientos de personas, no 1 solo
Каторжный и адский труд с профессиональными заболеваниями суставов и мышц. Таким способом работали древние египтяне при строительстве пирамид.
Maybe I would pay him a few coins for the performance, but I would definitely not buy the cd. - he needs to practice A LOT more.
rock music always worth a listen to
Laying on the couch after working all day watching videos of someone working lol