Made me realized how important they are for human civilization. No wonder they can't form large professional armies even when they had the population. Every bit is a result of accumulation of decades or even centuries.
Every bit of the stuffs valuable to me.. personally I'm a young fella from camada who just got into blacksmithing/metalworking and can't find any where im at other than small bits here n there out on walks
Thanks Jake for all your hard work and sharing your labor and knowledge with us! I extended my morning coffee the past four mornings to enjoy the vids! And I didn't even get my hands dirty! Thank you again. Dave WinDancerKnives
Thanks Jake. hope to see you around on UA-cam. If your ever in Illinois give me a holler, maybe we can do a river clay and straw smelter. here along the Mississippi river just next to st. Louis there are lots of public resources. IDNR and COE don't mind at all if i gather mud and black sand for iron work. the conservation police department are very friendly here.
Shows why it took a couple of thousand years for our ancestors to go from bronze age to iron age imagine figuring all this out from scratch. Brilliant job thanks for the time machine.
Something that might be helpful, is that when we did the smelt at the event, we went straight from the furnace to the forge. When consolidating the bloom, it was done basically in a dishing stump. The smaller bits that break off can settle to the bottom of the bowl, and be worked back in to the larger section of bloom. It definately consumes a LOT of fuel, but so does reheating it all. Loving this series! Thanks John and Jake!
I used to throw away any iron I don't need, any old screw, bolt, nut, and cut I can't use anymore.. After I watch your series of iron journey, I started to keep them to give to someone who can recycle them into usable iron..
Hello John This Video is a hidden treasure It Shows how hard it is is to get iron out of ore. It Shows how worth it was to have a knive or a Axe out of iron in older times. Today iron is nothing worth but you Show a other time Yours Frank
Gold is for the mistress -- silver for the maid -- Copper for the craftsman cunning at his trade "Good!" cried the Baron, sitting in his hall "But iron, cold iron, is the master of them all." So he made rebellion against the King, his liege Camped before his citadel and summoned it to siege "Nay," said the cannoneer on the castle wall "But iron, cold iron, shall be master of you all!" Woe for the Baron and his knights so strong When the cruel cannon-balls laid them all along He was taken prisoner, he was cast in thrall And iron, cold iron, was the master over all Yet his King spake kindly (ah how kind a lord!) "What if I release thee now, and give thee back thy sword?" "Nay!" said the Baron, "Mock not at my fall For iron, cold iron, is the master of men all." "Tears are for the craven. Prayers are for the clown Halters for the silly neck that cannot keep a crown As my loss is grievous, so my hope is small For iron, cold iron, must be master of men all." ua-cam.com/video/X8CkSw4hVog/v-deo.html Cold Iron by Kipling set to music.
I've watched a few people on UA-cam try to make and consolidate bloom iron for the first time. I think this video is the first one I've seen where the blacksmith was successful in consolidating it.
Alright already, Jeez. I would think that you would enjoy the experience but you found it ridiculous. I am no Smith but I stayed in a Holiday Inn Express last night and I watch UA-cam so.... The old Japanese fellow who made arguably the best swords in history broke his blooms up into crumbs and graded them. The hard and brittle were the edge of the blade and the softer more flexible bits were in the center for flexibility. And he said that he had to fold the product 1000 times with rice straw in the middle and flux before each heat. Thanks, I am loving it!
You messing around and seeing what you get was very entertaining. Very educational. Its great to see you talk through what you are doing. Explaining things makes it Not boring.
I think the greatest value that comes from things like this is a much greater appreciation for those people we called primitive such as the African tribes were a billet would be produced from the efforts of the whole tribe and the head blacksmith would divide it out to the families. Each family would get a hoe or other valuable tool. They would appreciate the value of that tool. Unlike us today that can purchase a cheap $5 hammer or the likes. Understanding these things grounds us and teaches us appreciation. And thanks to people like you who take the time to bring it to us here on YT.
I appreciate that you are doing this full-tilt- I mean doing everything you can so save every possible little bit of the bloom to get the maximum amount of wrought iron. It was a TON of work to get that precious little bit of bloom and I am pleased you are not wasting any of it. And it is NOT tedious or boring to watch- it is very interesting to see what has to happen before you can actually do a little smithing and make a small tool or two. Thanks, John! Dave- WinDancerKnives
For what its worth I've tuned in to see if the next one of this series had been uploaded religiously. Really enjoyed it and am very much looking forward to the wrought iron axe build. Fantastic collaboration thanks to you and Jake!
i appreciate you referred to it as pattern welded steel. too many people think it is called ''damascus'' and it grinds my gears. it aint damascus unless it was forge welded in damascus syria!
You say sometimes that the "tapetitap" is boring. Well, I think its interesting and not boring. Really fun to watch how this takes shape. The best and most interesting project I've seen you've done so far. And the other stuff you do is exellent, so this has to be good! 😊
Awesome, you created iron, from dirt, amazing!! This is really impressive, thank you for showing this. Makes one appreciate and realize what a luxury we have these days.
The little bits and bobs of bloom you have left are excellent pendants and bracelet centers for those who want a piece of "actual history" and they are out there. Get a jeweler from UA-cam to collaborate using "heritage" crafts (handmade) and list them for auction on your favorite selling site- or reach out to a museum- bits of slag glass are being used as bracelet materials mined from old furnace sites in WV and AL- parallel market and keep the collaborations going! -Love this series of videos! Bravo!
Thank you John and Jake for such an enlightening presentation. Not many of us get to see the principles of smelting and refining iron ore on a small scale, or even industrial scales.......🤠
Great video series on producing iron! For the little bloomey bits, could you heat a bunch of them in a crucible covered with coal, then consolidate them on a hydraulic press, using some flat bar around the lower die as containment? I think that if you flux the bits in the crucible, dump them into the fenced die and pressed them rapidly, they may stick enough to then oroceed to the anvil.
I think people who do this fairly often keep the crumbles and just remelt them in something like an orishigane process to get bigger bits. Thank you for great videos! Love the slow/patient format.
It's normal to compress the Bloom when it's right out from the fire. Here in Norway, we take the bloom out of the furnace, put it on a stump, and several people hit it with big wooden sledges. The bloom will be more solid before forging. Thanks for a great video,a again
That is what we did with the largest piece of bloom. All of these small pieces had to be collected from out of the rubble after it was cool enough to dig through and find them.
John, this has been an amazing series of videos and it really shows the work that it took for our ancestors to move from stone and wood to copper and bronze to iron and steel. Also I wanted to let you know that watching you hammer is not boring and I could honestly watch you just hammer and forge for hours because it is interesting to watch. Keep doing what you do because it is amazing :)
John another Outstanding Video,I'am so glad that we have progressed so far in the making of all different grades of Steel,I could'nt help noticing that ,It looks like the edges of your Anvil have been repaired,who ever did the work did a Great Job.Thanks Again.
Thank You Loader. I've see two video's having to work with bloom. One was remembering where iron started in Africa. It was good but for them it was a people project and the end product was hoe's and picks to work the land. It's always good to remember old skills an pass them onto the next generation. Some will fine it to be a waste of time, while others will fine what they want to do with their life. In making this video, you have helped the next generation remember their pass. Thank You For Passing It On.
The best thing to do about the smaller pieces of iron is to cover them with flux and a bit of charcoal, put them into a sealed/covered crucible and bring the entire thing to melting temp. Once melted, pour it into a sand or clay mold and continue to refine it
don't know if you have already learned this by now but the japanese would wrap their bars of steel in paper, straw, and clay slurry while refining them to prevent decarb and from losing the little pieces of iron. working it in one ounce increments is honestly pretty good compared to the little fragments they have to salvage sometimes.
I'm very interested to see what you can ultimately make from this. It really became clear watching this where the 'wrought' in wrought iron comes from. Excellent work!
I’ve been told that all the small, unused stuff would be saved then added to the kiln/forge an hour or two (last) before it was opened up to retrieve the next bloom. My uncle ( who told me that) was a survivalist, and generally knew what he was talking about.
Black Bear Forge Sorry, a few minutes after I made the comment you said you were going to do it. But after I read my comment, I can see how I said it in a confusing way. Rock on brother!👍
That was totally amazing! I also live in Colorado, up by the Wyoming state line. I've done my share of panning looking for something that glitters and usually wined up with a little black sand and maybe a few garnets. I'm sure as hell grateful I don't need to sweat that much in order to get some iron to work with...
Other than keeping with hand forging for the video content, I would suggest using your press to assist consolidating the bloom. May help in not losing the little bits and bobs and could help you consolidate the bits and bobs you have now. Cool project, very neat to see the process form start to finish!!!
As beautiful as wrought iron is, I can see why it went out of style. So much work for only a little piece. On another side the video was really entertaining and interesting. Thank you both for your time and effort to share this journey.
There were several improvements to the process including puddling iron, and the use of rollers to do a lot of the forging in a more efficient manner, but it was still much harder to make than modern steel.
That was not boring AT ALL, Sir! This process is absolutely mesmerizing. Is it just me or there are not enough videos on youtube showing Bloom being Refined?
Thanks John, and thanks Jake, information, even if I don’t need it increases my knowledge that could be used in future years for all sorts of things at this time I have no desire to follow! Who knows, maybe in the future one of my grandchildren will use some of this random knowledge I passed to them to build a better wheel!
Hmm this is awesome. Just to see that bloom consolidate into a usable billet. Wha5 about some coal storage options. Love to see where you store your coal.
Thank you for all the hard work. A tremendous effort for such a small amount of iron. I do recall watching swordsmiths of old wrap their pieces in stacked form with wet paper. Then coated in a clay slurry before bringing up to heat and welding. Perhaps?.
That is one great effort and brilliant investment of time and resources. I have been researching the same subject for a while now, mainly in the japanese blacksmithing world. But what is quite interesting in your project is the experiment it self and going through all mistakes to find answers. Maybe you will find some interesting links for japanese Tamahagane and how they treat it. God bless I highly recommend
i have seen a lot of people struggle with reheating blooms, the thing is that while its still glowing hot right out of the kiln you should try to smash all sides of the bloom to consolidate the hole lump. snapping off pieces of it gets you lots of little bits with a large inconsistency. i recommend having a look at thijs van de manakker or the documentary of iron smelting in meroe(sudan) done by lee sauder. stay healthy
I have. A bad rabbit of commenting on old videos, but I'm going to do it anyway. If you do another smelt; any small pieces that you can't get to fuse together can be thrown in as seed material.
Great video, your shots focusing on the work on the anvil, and your "tappity tappity" bits and such banter are what make the video entertaining. The work itself makes it educational. Thanks for illustrating what it would take to refine a bit of bog ore. It is mind blowing to me just how much raw resources it took to refine enough raw iron, then refine a bloom. How many trees had to be felled and turned into charcoal to make even just a pound of refined iron?! Also, good on you for giving the guy behind the camera a handshake, grattitude, and screen time.
The old furnace's here I think had a hole to run the slag out then troughed the iron into molds. They ran the furnaces until they ran out of wood and it became too far to haul charcoal. It think the Bessemer process replaced a lot of the furnaces. Great video
Once the Bessemer process was available, wrought irons days were numbered. Iron production was responsible for a great deal of deforestation around the world.
That is amazing i didn't know you had worked with tamahagane=jewel steel a.k.a bloom steel. This is the same material that japanese swords are made of. This is why the katana is so expensive i can't wait until i have enough experience to do this someday. Godbless be safe and as always and thanks for sharing your wisdom with us.
Very informational video iv learned a lot just these past few months watching and getting out into my own little shop if can call it that thanks a lot for what your doing
Try a burrito weld, flatten the main piece out as much as possible, put the smaller pieces to be folded in on top, and fold the larger piece around it. Add some flux before folding and then put it in the forge. Then it should weld together. I don't know that will work but its what I would try.
Hears a tip I hound works well that is to forge it all flat not square in the first forging after u get it all falt I weld it all together then refine it by drawing out and folding and welding over and over till your happy seems like it turned out well for the first time better then my first time good job on the video hope the information is useful
Very impressive. Can't wait to see the big one worked! You really did good with the slag! I found a piece of slag today i was gonna try make something out of. Its very small tho. Like a pingis ball. But i grouns it against a rock and it is silver inside and sticks to a magnet so must be some iron in it!
Enjoyed watching. I saw you learning as you went too. As you discovered, initial refining is at a lower heat and when you hit "real" iron rather than slag you can tell the difference. If the bloom is removed from the bottom of the bloomery while the fire is still going it is at the proper heat to compress the "sponge" as it's called. (tapping the slag off also makes quite a difference) If this initial refining is done right there and then, on the stump, and you hit it with increasing force until you're hitting it hard and often (usually done with one or two strikers)by the time you take it to the forge it's MUCH less work to make useable iron. "Bloom bits" are either discarded or put back into the next smelt. The ore there is much higher grade than the ore here but I'm guessing that you're overestimating the yield of the larger bloom. It's been fun! :-)
We did take the largest piece directly to the stump while it was still at heat. It certainly helped. But the rest of it had to be hunted down after the area cooled enough to sift through the rubble. We will see what happens with the big piece. Biut even oif the yield is the same it will be a full pound and thats enough to do something respectable.
Great series, John. It looked like you were getting the consolidation process dialed in with your spoon technique. Could you have used the forging press to smoosh the bloom into plates, stack, flux and repeat? Clyde
This is the cool-ass grandpa that everyone wishes they had.
It really makes you think of how valuable every little bit of iron was in olden times. Great video!
It's how the Hittites beat the Egyptians.
Made me realized how important they are for human civilization. No wonder they can't form large professional armies even when they had the population. Every bit is a result of accumulation of decades or even centuries.
Every bit of the stuffs valuable to me.. personally I'm a young fella from camada who just got into blacksmithing/metalworking and can't find any where im at other than small bits here n there out on walks
It still is very valuable, the price is deflated because of chinese slave labor dumping Products into usa as part of economic warfare
And steel was incredibly expensive
@Black Bear Forge, It never gets boring to watch a working person. That's a real thing in psychology, man.
I love work, I can watch other people do it for hours.
Am I bored watching you hammer? Nope- I love watching iron being worked. Its positively mesmerising for me.
To me, it's very zen watching smiths work.
Before the forge, there is iron.
After the forge, there is iron.
John, thank you so much for hosting me at your forge. I got so much valuable data that will improve the future iron smelts that I do.
It was my pleasure
Thank you guy's for the great serie of videos, it was well worth watching! As is all your other videos John, really apreachiate your efforts!
Thanks Jake for all your hard work and sharing your labor and knowledge with us! I extended my morning coffee the past four mornings to enjoy the vids! And I didn't even get my hands dirty! Thank you again.
Dave WinDancerKnives
Thanks Jake. hope to see you around on UA-cam. If your ever in Illinois give me a holler, maybe we can do a river clay and straw smelter. here along the Mississippi river just next to st. Louis there are lots of public resources. IDNR and COE don't mind at all if i gather mud and black sand for iron work. the conservation police department are very friendly here.
Joe, I will be contacting you when I get ready to do a smelt in the Midwest.
Shows why it took a couple of thousand years for our ancestors to go from bronze age to iron age imagine figuring all this out from scratch. Brilliant job thanks for the time machine.
So very true.
Something that might be helpful, is that when we did the smelt at the event, we went straight from the furnace to the forge. When consolidating the bloom, it was done basically in a dishing stump. The smaller bits that break off can settle to the bottom of the bowl, and be worked back in to the larger section of bloom. It definately consumes a LOT of fuel, but so does reheating it all. Loving this series! Thanks John and Jake!
I used to throw away any iron I don't need, any old screw, bolt, nut, and cut I can't use anymore.. After I watch your series of iron journey, I started to keep them to give to someone who can recycle them into usable iron..
Hello John
This Video is a hidden treasure
It Shows how hard it is is to get iron out of ore.
It Shows how worth it was to have a knive or a Axe out of iron in older times.
Today iron is nothing worth but you Show a other time
Yours Frank
How many people alive today have ever done what you two have, only a hand full I'll tell you, nobody can ever take that away, Way to be!
Gold is for the mistress -- silver for the maid --
Copper for the craftsman cunning at his trade
"Good!" cried the Baron, sitting in his hall
"But iron, cold iron, is the master of them all."
So he made rebellion against the King, his liege
Camped before his citadel and summoned it to siege
"Nay," said the cannoneer on the castle wall
"But iron, cold iron, shall be master of you all!"
Woe for the Baron and his knights so strong
When the cruel cannon-balls laid them all along
He was taken prisoner, he was cast in thrall
And iron, cold iron, was the master over all
Yet his King spake kindly (ah how kind a lord!)
"What if I release thee now, and give thee back thy sword?"
"Nay!" said the Baron, "Mock not at my fall
For iron, cold iron, is the master of men all."
"Tears are for the craven. Prayers are for the clown
Halters for the silly neck that cannot keep a crown
As my loss is grievous, so my hope is small
For iron, cold iron, must be master of men all."
ua-cam.com/video/X8CkSw4hVog/v-deo.html Cold Iron by Kipling set to music.
Grandfather Tech,, ,,, that was awesome,, thanks
I've watched a few people on UA-cam try to make and consolidate bloom iron for the first time. I think this video is the first one I've seen where the blacksmith was successful in consolidating it.
Alright already, Jeez. I would think that you would enjoy the experience but you found it ridiculous. I am no Smith but I stayed in a Holiday Inn Express last night and I watch UA-cam so.... The old Japanese fellow who made arguably the best swords in history broke his blooms up into crumbs and graded them. The hard and brittle were the edge of the blade and the softer more flexible bits were in the center for flexibility. And he said that he had to fold the product 1000 times with rice straw in the middle and flux before each heat. Thanks, I am loving it!
You messing around and seeing what you get was very entertaining. Very educational. Its great to see you talk through what you are doing. Explaining things makes it Not boring.
nothing is boring as long as your learning from the process thank you and Jake for taking the time to make and process this series very interisting
I think the greatest value that comes from things like this is a much greater appreciation for those people we called primitive such as the African tribes were a billet would be produced from the efforts of the whole tribe and the head blacksmith would divide it out to the families. Each family would get a hoe or other valuable tool. They would appreciate the value of that tool. Unlike us today that can purchase a cheap $5 hammer or the likes. Understanding these things grounds us and teaches us appreciation. And thanks to people like you who take the time to bring it to us here on YT.
Yeeeeaaaahhh! Now it is time to recall some ancient technologies.
Cant get bored with Knowledge
I appreciate that you are doing this full-tilt- I mean doing everything you can so save every possible little bit of the bloom to get the maximum amount of wrought iron. It was a TON of work to get that precious little bit of bloom and I am pleased you are not wasting any of it. And it is NOT tedious or boring to watch- it is very interesting to see what has to happen before you can actually do a little smithing and make a small tool or two. Thanks, John!
Dave- WinDancerKnives
Glad you liked it
This is great! Consider the advancement the first bit of wrought iron brought.
Incredible.
For what its worth I've tuned in to see if the next one of this series had been uploaded religiously. Really enjoyed it and am very much looking forward to the wrought iron axe build. Fantastic collaboration thanks to you and Jake!
Glad you liked it. I hope I get a chance to this again sometime.
i appreciate you referred to it as pattern welded steel. too many people think it is called ''damascus'' and it grinds my gears. it aint damascus unless it was forge welded in damascus syria!
I thought a42:33 minute video was going to be long,seemed like 10 minutes , very interesting ,THANKS.
Thanks, I was afraid it would be way to long.
You say sometimes that the "tapetitap" is boring. Well, I think its interesting and not boring. Really fun to watch how this takes shape. The best and most interesting project I've seen you've done so far. And the other stuff you do is exellent, so this has to be good! 😊
Thanks
I agree! Love the videos, so much knowledge...
Appreciating iron in a new way!
Nothing boring here! Thanks for doing this, obviously not for profit
Can not wait for you to make the hammer and axe and turning the wrought iron into steel.
Awesome, you created iron, from dirt, amazing!! This is really impressive, thank you for showing this. Makes one appreciate and realize what a luxury we have these days.
The little bits and bobs of bloom you have left are excellent pendants and bracelet centers for those who want a piece of "actual history" and they are out there. Get a jeweler from UA-cam to collaborate using "heritage" crafts (handmade) and list them for auction on your favorite selling site- or reach out to a museum- bits of slag glass are being used as bracelet materials mined from old furnace sites in WV and AL- parallel market and keep the collaborations going!
-Love this series of videos! Bravo!
Thank goodness they came up with easier processes.
This is not boring at all. This is super interesting to me. I'm fascinated by this. Taking dirt to make a very strong and useful alloy is like magic.
I’m loving every second of you struggling with these blooms, no boredom here!
Not boring. Watch metal take shape from ore is inspiring.
Good job on capturing the most primitive iron making process.
Smelting and refining iron is a labour intensive process. Thanks for sharing
When we smelt at the local community center we save all the to small bits and add them to the next batch works well
Thank you John and Jake for such an enlightening presentation. Not many of us get to see the principles of smelting and refining iron ore on a small scale, or even industrial scales.......🤠
Jake gets most of the credit, I was just along for the ride
Great video series on producing iron!
For the little bloomey bits, could you heat a bunch of them in a crucible covered with coal, then consolidate them on a hydraulic press, using some flat bar around the lower die as containment? I think that if you flux the bits in the crucible, dump them into the fenced die and pressed them rapidly, they may stick enough to then oroceed to the anvil.
Patiense, the name of the game ...Good Job!
Bloomin spoons with John and Jake! Mahalo and aloha Black bear forge!
I think people who do this fairly often keep the crumbles and just remelt them in something like an orishigane process to get bigger bits. Thank you for great videos! Love the slow/patient format.
Agree, but there's an english term for that, "Hearth refining".
It's normal to compress the Bloom when it's right out from the fire. Here in Norway, we take the bloom out of the furnace, put it on a stump, and several people hit it with big wooden sledges. The bloom will be more solid before forging. Thanks for a great video,a again
That is what we did with the largest piece of bloom. All of these small pieces had to be collected from out of the rubble after it was cool enough to dig through and find them.
Loved this series on smelting and refining iron.
John, this has been an amazing series of videos and it really shows the work that it took for our ancestors to move from stone and wood to copper and bronze to iron and steel. Also I wanted to let you know that watching you hammer is not boring and I could honestly watch you just hammer and forge for hours because it is interesting to watch. Keep doing what you do because it is amazing :)
John another Outstanding Video,I'am so glad that we have progressed so far in the making of all different grades of Steel,I could'nt help noticing that ,It looks like the edges of your Anvil have been repaired,who ever did the work did a Great Job.Thanks Again.
Thanks, the anvil repair was before I acquired it
Thank You Loader. I've see two video's having to work with bloom. One was remembering where iron started in Africa. It was good but for them it was a people project and the end product was hoe's and picks to work the land. It's always good to remember old skills an pass them onto the next generation. Some will fine it to be a waste of time, while others will fine what they want to do with their life. In making this video, you have helped the next generation remember their pass. Thank You For Passing It On.
Very great job! 👏👏👏👏👏
The best thing to do about the smaller pieces of iron is to cover them with flux and a bit of charcoal, put them into a sealed/covered crucible and bring the entire thing to melting temp. Once melted, pour it into a sand or clay mold and continue to refine it
Great series on the making of wrought iron. Enjoying every minute. Thank you for sharing this project.
don't know if you have already learned this by now but the japanese would wrap their bars of steel in paper, straw, and clay slurry while refining them to prevent decarb and from losing the little pieces of iron. working it in one ounce increments is honestly pretty good compared to the little fragments they have to salvage sometimes.
Really enjoyed this series. Cool stuff.
Awesome series. Just lacked banjo.
My god man keep them coming 100000000 thanks for what you do for us you make me a better blacksmith with every video
I'm very interested to see what you can ultimately make from this. It really became clear watching this where the 'wrought' in wrought iron comes from. Excellent work!
I would like to have seen the old mills where they made wrought iron in huge quantities.
I’ve been told that all the small, unused stuff would be saved then added to the kiln/forge an hour or two (last) before it was opened up to retrieve the next bloom.
My uncle ( who told me that) was a survivalist, and generally knew what he was talking about.
Perhaps but outside the scope f this particular project
Black Bear Forge
Sorry, a few minutes after I made the comment you said you were going to do it.
But after I read my comment, I can see how I said it in a confusing way. Rock on brother!👍
That was totally amazing! I also live in Colorado, up by the Wyoming state line. I've done my share of panning looking for something that glitters and usually wined up with a little black sand and maybe a few garnets. I'm sure as hell grateful I don't need to sweat that much in order to get some iron to work with...
Other than keeping with hand forging for the video content, I would suggest using your press to assist consolidating the bloom. May help in not losing the little bits and bobs and could help you consolidate the bits and bobs you have now. Cool project, very neat to see the process form start to finish!!!
As beautiful as wrought iron is, I can see why it went out of style. So much work for only a little piece. On another side the video was really entertaining and interesting. Thank you both for your time and effort to share this journey.
I am sure large scale production was much more efficient, but in many parts of the world this is the best it ever got.
There were several improvements to the process including puddling iron, and the use of rollers to do a lot of the forging in a more efficient manner, but it was still much harder to make than modern steel.
That was not boring AT ALL, Sir! This process is absolutely mesmerizing. Is it just me or there are not enough videos on youtube showing Bloom being Refined?
now this is content! 5/5
Excellent! Very interesting!
Thanks John, and
thanks Jake, information, even if I don’t need it increases my knowledge that could be used in future years for all sorts of things at this time I have no desire to follow! Who knows, maybe in the future one of my grandchildren will use some of this random knowledge I passed to them to build a better wheel!
A wonderful video and it's very interesting what you have done all the way from the furnace to the wrought iron.
and it was fun
Thank you and Jake what an awesome demonstration. I really enjoyed the presentation.
That is really cool. Good job. I was thinking maybe you should try the fly press to consolidate the big bloom. Just a suggestion.
The bloom was so fragile at the beginning I think the press would have just destroyed it.
This is great watching you learn.
Filing or wrought iron but it was fun. Thank you.
Very interesting. I have enjoyed this series. Look forward to getting back on the grill project
Great video!
Hmm this is awesome. Just to see that bloom consolidate into a usable billet. Wha5 about some coal storage options. Love to see where you store your coal.
I can do that.
Thanks!
Thank you for all the hard work. A tremendous effort for such a small amount of iron. I do recall watching swordsmiths of old wrap their pieces in stacked form with wet paper. Then coated in a clay slurry before bringing up to heat and welding. Perhaps?.
I just watched a bit of that in a video someone linked to. Quite likely it would work form many of those little bits.
grate vid ty and jake jim
That was a really interesting video for someone like me who has no knowledge of the subject.
That is one great effort and brilliant investment of time and resources.
I have been researching the same subject for a while now, mainly in the japanese blacksmithing world. But what is quite interesting in your project is the experiment it self and going through all mistakes to find answers.
Maybe you will find some interesting links for japanese Tamahagane and how they treat it.
God bless
I highly recommend
i have seen a lot of people struggle with reheating blooms, the thing is that while its still glowing hot right out of the kiln you should try to smash all sides of the bloom to consolidate the hole lump. snapping off pieces of it gets you lots of little bits with a large inconsistency. i recommend having a look at thijs van de manakker or the documentary of iron smelting in meroe(sudan) done by lee sauder. stay healthy
Another great video. Look forward to trying it myself one day.
I love it, can't wait for the next installment
The BB's are called Iron Prill and are the best part of the smelt.
u got a subscriber. excellent, zombie apocalypse education.
Would love to see a playlist dedicated to all true wrought iron processes
Well I certainly didn't find any of that Tedious or Boring. Great stuff as always.
great video, thanks!
I have. A bad rabbit of commenting on old videos, but I'm going to do it anyway. If you do another smelt; any small pieces that you can't get to fuse together can be thrown in as seed material.
Amazing video, I can't wait to see you make some tools from this.
Great video, your shots focusing on the work on the anvil, and your "tappity tappity" bits and such banter are what make the video entertaining. The work itself makes it educational. Thanks for illustrating what it would take to refine a bit of bog ore. It is mind blowing to me just how much raw resources it took to refine enough raw iron, then refine a bloom. How many trees had to be felled and turned into charcoal to make even just a pound of refined iron?! Also, good on you for giving the guy behind the camera a handshake, grattitude, and screen time.
That was an amazing process and very interesting. Thanks to you both!
The old furnace's here I think had a hole to run the slag out then troughed the iron into molds. They ran the furnaces until they ran out of wood and it became too far to haul charcoal. It think the Bessemer process replaced a lot of the furnaces. Great video
Once the Bessemer process was available, wrought irons days were numbered. Iron production was responsible for a great deal of deforestation around the world.
That is amazing i didn't know you had worked with tamahagane=jewel steel a.k.a bloom steel. This is the same material that japanese swords are made of. This is why the katana is so expensive i can't wait until i have enough experience to do this someday. Godbless be safe and as always and thanks for sharing your wisdom with us.
Everything you lose, you were supposed to lose. Everything that stays is good shit. Quality material demonstrates itself.
Very informational video iv learned a lot just these past few months watching and getting out into my own little shop if can call it that thanks a lot for what your doing
Try a burrito weld, flatten the main piece out as much as possible, put the smaller pieces to be folded in on top, and fold the larger piece around it. Add some flux before folding and then put it in the forge. Then it should weld together. I don't know that will work but its what I would try.
This is one of the most fascinating videos I’ve ever watched. Amazing work! 🙌 🔥
thanks
Hears a tip I hound works well that is to forge it all flat not square in the first forging after u get it all falt I weld it all together then refine it by drawing out and folding and welding over and over till your happy seems like it turned out well for the first time better then my first time good job on the video hope the information is useful
I really enjoyed the video, and your end results looked pretty good!
Keep up the good work and we,,we'll be there to see all your work,,,
Very impressive. Can't wait to see the big one worked! You really did good with the slag! I found a piece of slag today i was gonna try make something out of. Its very small tho. Like a pingis ball. But i grouns it against a rock and it is silver inside and sticks to a magnet so must be some iron in it!
Very grateful guys....
Yes a very cool process thank you for the series
Enjoyed watching. I saw you learning as you went too. As you discovered, initial refining is at a lower heat and when you hit "real" iron rather than slag you can tell the difference. If the bloom is removed from the bottom of the bloomery while the fire is still going it is at the proper heat to compress the "sponge" as it's called. (tapping the slag off also makes quite a difference) If this initial refining is done right there and then, on the stump, and you hit it with increasing force until you're hitting it hard and often (usually done with one or two strikers)by the time you take it to the forge it's MUCH less work to make useable iron. "Bloom bits" are either discarded or put back into the next smelt. The ore there is much higher grade than the ore here but I'm guessing that you're overestimating the yield of the larger bloom. It's been fun! :-)
We did take the largest piece directly to the stump while it was still at heat. It certainly helped. But the rest of it had to be hunted down after the area cooled enough to sift through the rubble. We will see what happens with the big piece. Biut even oif the yield is the same it will be a full pound and thats enough to do something respectable.
Great series, John. It looked like you were getting the consolidation process dialed in with your spoon technique. Could you have used the forging press to smoosh the bloom into plates, stack, flux and repeat? Clyde
I think the press would be to aggressive at that stage. As the bar is refined it should be an option.
Thanks,,, that was awesome