I think the cable would be the worst, because it has all that surface, so getting the oxides out of that is probably the most laybour intensive and have the biggest risk of getting unpurities that'll lead to weak points
@@toadface8627 Metals are not chemicals. A chemist wouldn't know much more about metals than any other demographic. I did however study metallurgy on MIT
You know I was 7 years old and I found some shitty metal and tried to forge myself a sword. It worked but the steal broke when I tested it. Also it was an ugly knife made by a 7 yr old with nothing but a hammer and a fire and a rock. I even used a shoelace for the handle!
I don't get though why they first risk damaging the blade edge in the durability test and then afterwards try to see how well it cuts...with a possibly damaged blade...sorry but it's stupid...why not just do the cut test first...? xD
@@jackson24241000 sorry for my bad english. Vikings are nordic saxens are english. But since i didnt think people spoke Any nordic in here i try in english. But for you here is some danish, hold nu kæft et pretensiøst røvhul du er
Dude, it wasn't a Viking "Saxon" blade, it was a Viking SEAX, which IS a Viking thing. A saxon blade and a Seax are 2 completely different blades with different origins.
I would be interested in seeing them make a sword from a meteorite
They have
Cabot made 1911s out of a meteorite
Unfortunately, meteorite makes for terrible weapon steel.
Funny you say that they have done that
Meteorite isn't exactly the best metal for things like this. As meteorite isn't usually high carbon.
I think the cable would be the worst, because it has all that surface, so getting the oxides out of that is probably the most laybour intensive and have the biggest risk of getting unpurities that'll lead to weak points
You a chemist or something?
@@toadface8627 Metals are not chemicals. A chemist wouldn't know much more about metals than any other demographic. I did however study metallurgy on MIT
Misleading thumbnail
I agree
Could you do a part 2 because they used big blue
Pinballtable is the worst. Every metalic part of it has a different amount of carbon in it for various purposes.
You know I was 7 years old and I found some shitty metal and tried to forge myself a sword. It worked but the steal broke when I tested it. Also it was an ugly knife made by a 7 yr old with nothing but a hammer and a fire and a rock. I even used a shoelace for the handle!
The fact that you did it at 7 is brilliant itself brother🙌🏻❤️
The repetitive cuts are garbage. Just to hit that 10 min mark
Brilliant work
Brilliant work to you my friend!!!
I don't get though why they first risk damaging the blade edge in the durability test and then afterwards try to see how well it cuts...with a possibly damaged blade...sorry but it's stupid...why not just do the cut test first...? xD
Its sax as in sea ax. Just saying.
No sutch Thing as a viking saxen knife. A saxen knife is a saxen Thing. Not a viking thing
Viking seax...look it up
Sutch? Saxen? Dictionary anyone?
@@jackson24241000 sorry for my bad english. Vikings are nordic saxens are english. But since i didnt think people spoke Any nordic in here i try in english. But for you here is some danish, hold nu kæft et pretensiøst røvhul du er
Dude, it wasn't a Viking "Saxon" blade, it was a Viking SEAX, which IS a Viking thing. A saxon blade and a Seax are 2 completely different blades with different origins.
@@danbrannbacka3769 seax comes from the saxen knife. But the vikings used their own form (shape if you like) its what you would call a viking knife.
nice clickbait
😮😮
3rd comment
Damn. Robert was my first pick! Hahaha first one out! Fuck!