Im 27 years old. Just built my own forge, quench tube, bought a cheep grinder and forged my first set of simple flat jaw tongs and used them to forge a knife out if a old file. Alot of me doing this was inspired by you. Your educational content is amazing and has helped me out tremendously. I appreciate it like no other. Once this knife is done (glueing handle right now) then im going to attempt the veggie chopper from a couple videos ago. Anyways thanks for the inspiration and knowledge!!!!!
Still my favorite blacksmith on UA-cam, and this gentleman is a blacksmith in the truest form. He makes stylish, functional pieces of work that are meant to be used. Plus he is keeping the trade alive by providing us neophytes excellent, FREE, instructional videos.
I've been interested in traditional blacksmithing for a few years, but thought it was about knife making, until I found your videos. You have completely inspired me to begin blacksmithing, bought a decent anvil and have built a coal forge, after Christmas I'm going to purchase a gas forge thank you for your videos
I’ve been interested in blacksmithing and after watching your videos I decided to go for it. Today I tried out my setup. Small propane forge, 18” piece of railroad track mounted on a heavy 3 legged stand with a large old vice mounted on one end. I need bigger arms among other things. Trying to make a pair of tongs out of 3/4 round bar. Thanks for the encouragement
just started forging here in Ireland. First instruction in forging was at school over fifty years ago and always longed to have another go at it. Recent retirement has offered me that opportunity. Bought an anvil and a gas forge and this looks like something I could give a try. Have learned a lot from watching your video's. Hoping to try my hand at forge welding and think this will be the place to start. Thanks again for the inspiration.
On your fine handle I would elongated the loop and go with a smaller loop for hanging. Great job teaching Sir always love your treatment for us folks that doesn't have great tooling such as a touch ( yes now I know myself good enough that I should have gotten a torch years ago and I would have used it many times. Thanks again Sir
Hi John, Like so many you have inspired me to start blacksmithing. I am 50 years old and I just built my anvil stand for my 66lb anvil. All I need now is a heat source and I am ready to go. Thanks for all you do.
Find a local blacksmithing group and get to a couple of meetings or attend a few “hammer-ins”when this COVID crap clears up. Blacksmith’s are a sharing bunch and you’ll learn more first hand than trying to hone your skills from videos on UA-cam. John Switzer is a great teacher, communicator, craftsman and a great resource for blacksmithing, but I’m sure he would be the first guy to tell you there’s so much more to learn when you can see it in person. Good luck with the pursuit of your new hobby! Cheers! Whipple
Hi John, you opened up poking around in the stove. I did the same thing this afternoon, had a nice bed of coles, added a piece of flat stock 1 1/4" wide 3/8" x 8" long. Needed to make a hook on one end for a gear puller. Couple of minutes up to very hot, couple more heats nice clean hook. This dosen't mean I am going to stop working on my blacksmith shop. 👍
Really gotta say your videos has been more and more professionally done and I really wanna give it to you that you're doing a great work. I loved your older videos and I love the newer ones. You give me a lot of inspiration! Thank you, John.
He made it look easier than it really is. Not that the weld he did is hard because you don't really have to prep with a scarf, but his control of heat, awareness of the right colors and accuracy with smooth light strikes takes practice. If he hit that too hard or at the wrong angle it would have slid apart and turned into a pile of mush.
I teach using gas forges because they are portable (I also comment under Second Chance Forge) and teach this style without the forge weld since it is so difficult to get to heat with propane. It holds well just doubled over on itself. Beautiful work (3 years ago).
When I started on the blacksmithing course at Hereford in England 25 years ago this was the first thing the students made as it taught several important factors in one item. We used square stock, the rats tail at the handle end was to teach not burning the metal and where to place it in the forge as well as hammer work, descaling etc. The other end we 'upset' to make a bodkin point, like armour piercing arrowheads! all the time maintaining the square edge, the shaft we did barley twists in two places. No gas torches, no pincers, just hammer anvil and forge. There's a lot of learning to be had from making something as simple as a poker.
I don't have a forge yet but I have a torch. So I'm going to make me a poker and as you suggested I'll add the additional turns down the handle. Thanks for the inspiration.
your great sir...your one of my favorite americans 😁 your ideas are pure art...everthing has its meaning and isnt useless...every detail of your work is skill and know-how...great videos ✌
Good morning Sir, what a great idea! Thank you very much for the video. It is as you say, a great gift in winter season. Have a wonderful day Sir! Blessings!
Good morning and, thank you John for sharing another great instructional video. I was literally impressed with the ease in which you accomplished that Forge Weld. The Poker turned out great. I think you're right, more length of the round rod is needed so the wrap would be longer to accommodate larger hands. Overall all, I grade this video at 110% 👍. Thanks again for sharing your talent with us. Stan
One of the things I love about your videos is how often you say, "...but not everyone has [insert tool here] so I'm going to show you how to do it without one."
Hi John its 3am in Australia I'm just looking for something to ease the mind mate . So thanks John your projects all ways help , I will make a dozen of the pokers for friends and family so thanks again mate . cheers. (:
Well, John, you taught me a good tip in this video. When making pokers like this (usually out of 3/8" square rod), I have trouble keeping the weld from splitting when making the curved "hook" part. I never thought to clamp it in the vise to keep the weld from splitting. Thanks for the tip!! I guess you *can* teach old dogs new tricks, LOL.
The problem with multiple welding heats on this style tip is that they get too thin so one heat with a slightly less that perfect weld is better than the thin spindly point.
@@BlackBearForge That's precisely the problem I was having. Too thin of a point might tend to bend if one isn't careful and leaves it in the stove or campfire too long. Thin tip-hot fire, not good!
Just found your UA-cam channel. I enjoy how you talk . You make it easy to understand. I'll enjoy going back and watching your videos. Thank you so much ric from wnc
I would love to learn under you I want to be a blacksmith but I'm only 19 and it's hard for me to get a proper forge I watch alot of videos like this just learning basic stuff but the way you explained things is so easy for me to understand
Keep the interest alive and before you know it you'll be able to start acquiring the tools and equipment you need. A good start is getting involved with a local group.
I really hate to suggest something to a pro like yourself, but I used to build wire fences that we wrapped wire over wire much like you are doing on loop end, to do this we used a tube a little larger ID of the wire OD and could slip the tube over the wire and get very tight wraps because the fulcrum was right next to what I was wrapping around. a 2 foot piece of 1/2 ID pipe would do the job here. Again I hate to throw in my two cents but I believe it would speed your wrapping and give give you a very tight wrap. Have a wonderful thanks giving and I hope this is taken in the spirit of thanks I have for your great You Tube channel
I think that bat'leth would look cool with a mini stand to hang it from..... double hook style so it can hang as if it was hanging on a wall 🙂 Your poker cam out looking nice and having the really long rap for the handle sounds quite cool 👍👍👍
Maestro, ¿ qué le añadió para que fusionara ese extremo ?....excelente trabajo......siempre hay algo por aprender y comprender., abundancia, prosperidad, amor, salud, alegría, armonía...para ud y su familia...hare krishna
I'm going to buy some real anvil soon (and replace my old cast iron block) and I think that something like this would be one of my first show of skill for friends. Also need to learn forge welding and that looks not so hard. Thanks for video!
I like the idea of the longer wrapped handle. In the Battleth, just a small adjustment/offset on one end, and a sharpen, and it could likely be a can opener too. Something to think about anyway. A hand operated can opener so you can open those pork-n-beans during a power outage. There's a project idea.
I have a video idea for you. I noticed when you took the round bar and put it into the fire, you flipped up a little metal holder. Could you do a video on how to make one of those holders to support your extra metal?
Awesome poker, my brother has a wood burner in his living room and that would've made a great Christmas present, had I seen this sooner. Anyway, great video, I learn more every video I watch. I'm not sure if I'm going to try forging myself yet, but I really enjoy watching it done.
John- If perhaps you could mark the round bars w/ soap stone in such a way that folks can better see the rotations- maybe just a line running with the length of the bar, just for a visual reference. Thanks for all your efforts! JBR
Great idea. It is hard to see how he is manuvering the material. Maybe a stripe marked down one side so we can see if he is spinning it or going back and forth, even in square-bar it is sometimes hard to see if the camera us not zoomed in.
I Trek, I approve. If you're at all interested I recommend watching the DS9 episode where Quark (bar tender) gets married to a Klingon. Seems appropriate.
Great straightforward design and a fun forge weld. Would make nice Christmas presents. I am curious how it would look using square stock. Thanks as always for what you do.
Hello John Thank you for this toutorial Video This firepoker is a good piece to learn And by the way i think you are a little Trecky as i do too All the best for the next week and stay healthy Yours Frank
At 7:05 when you are grabbing the steel I mistook the rusty red color for heat and thought you were superhuman. Well, we know you are, but it would have been proof haha
Next time all you have to do is bring your wrap material down beside the shaft side you want to wrap. 10 inches is plenty. Get both sides hot and twist them together in a vise. Now it's going to twist both but you get the same effect with less material.
By the time I got doen with this project, my wife would ask, "Is it supposed be all wavy and off to one side?" "It's for poking fires that are around the corner." I'd reply.
You can but you need a much greater mass of material to start with or you end up with a point and hook that bend easily ua-cam.com/video/wb71qijSPRM/v-deo.html
Mind over Metal forge would like to ask When you talk about waxing projects you've completed is there anything special or specific about the wax you use?
Im 27 years old. Just built my own forge, quench tube, bought a cheep grinder and forged my first set of simple flat jaw tongs and used them to forge a knife out if a old file. Alot of me doing this was inspired by you. Your educational content is amazing and has helped me out tremendously. I appreciate it like no other. Once this knife is done (glueing handle right now) then im going to attempt the veggie chopper from a couple videos ago. Anyways thanks for the inspiration and knowledge!!!!!
Still my favorite blacksmith on UA-cam, and this gentleman is a blacksmith in the truest form. He makes stylish, functional pieces of work that are meant to be used. Plus he is keeping the trade alive by providing us neophytes excellent, FREE, instructional videos.
My favorite blacksmith. So many blacksmithing videos assume that the viewer has a power hammer. Thank you for such educational videos.
It isn't so much assuming the viewer has a power hammer, but more showing how that smith actually works.
I've been interested in traditional blacksmithing for a few years, but thought it was about knife making, until I found your videos. You have completely inspired me to begin blacksmithing, bought a decent anvil and have built a coal forge, after Christmas I'm going to purchase a gas forge thank you for your videos
simple and straightforward. No show-off. You awesome. Best Reagrds
Anybody who can name a bat'leth right away is my kind of guy. I knew there was a reason I liked watching your videos. :)
Wow amazing video great work brother who enjoy ❤️ this video hit the like 👍
I’ve been interested in blacksmithing and after watching your videos I decided to go for it. Today I tried out my setup. Small propane forge, 18” piece of railroad track mounted on a heavy 3 legged stand with a large old vice mounted on one end. I need bigger arms among other things. Trying to make a pair of tongs out of 3/4 round bar.
Thanks for the encouragement
Thanks for your comprehensive tutorials!
just started forging here in Ireland. First instruction in forging was at school over fifty years ago and always longed to have another go at it. Recent retirement has offered me that opportunity. Bought an anvil and a gas forge and this looks like something I could give a try. Have learned a lot from watching your video's. Hoping to try my hand at forge welding and think this will be the place to start. Thanks again for the inspiration.
Enjoy the journey
Good on ya, you come to the right place, John has made some amazing things on his channel.
Nice for the wood stove. Thanks for sharing.
On your fine handle I would elongated the loop and go with a smaller loop for hanging.
Great job teaching Sir always love your treatment for us folks that doesn't have great tooling such as a touch ( yes now I know myself good enough that I should have gotten a torch years ago and I would have used it many times.
Thanks again Sir
Hi John, Like so many you have inspired me to start blacksmithing. I am 50 years old and I just built my anvil stand for my 66lb anvil. All I need now is a heat source and I am ready to go. Thanks for all you do.
Find a local blacksmithing group and get to a couple of meetings or attend a few “hammer-ins”when this COVID crap clears up. Blacksmith’s are a sharing bunch and you’ll learn more first hand than trying to hone your skills from videos on UA-cam. John Switzer is a great teacher, communicator, craftsman and a great resource for blacksmithing, but I’m sure he would be the first guy to tell you there’s so much more to learn when you can see it in person. Good luck with the pursuit of your new hobby!
Cheers!
Whipple
Hi John, you opened up poking around in the stove.
I did the same thing this afternoon, had a nice bed of coles, added a piece of flat stock 1 1/4" wide 3/8" x 8" long. Needed to make a hook on one end for a gear puller. Couple of minutes up to very hot, couple more heats nice clean hook.
This dosen't mean I am going to stop working on my blacksmith shop. 👍
Really gotta say your videos has been more and more professionally done and I really wanna give it to you that you're doing a great work. I loved your older videos and I love the newer ones. You give me a lot of inspiration! Thank you, John.
I appreciate that!
I never stop learning from you, Thanks.
Thanks and greetings from Minnesota.
I didn't realize it's that simple to do a forge weld! Great idea. Off to the garage!!
Glad you liked it!
Iron mountain flux is wizardry (great stuff)
Same!
@@BlackBearForge check out John Jude's comment it is great I should have said it and it goes double for me
He made it look easier than it really is. Not that the weld he did is hard because you don't really have to prep with a scarf, but his control of heat, awareness of the right colors and accuracy with smooth light strikes takes practice. If he hit that too hard or at the wrong angle it would have slid apart and turned into a pile of mush.
Nice job. This is a good starter peice as it teaches a bit of forge welding, eye making and tail reducing and twisting.
I teach using gas forges because they are portable (I also comment under Second Chance Forge) and teach this style without the forge weld since it is so difficult to get to heat with propane. It holds well just doubled over on itself. Beautiful work (3 years ago).
When I started on the blacksmithing course at Hereford in England 25 years ago this was the first thing the students made as it taught several important factors in one item. We used square stock, the rats tail at the handle end was to teach not burning the metal and where to place it in the forge as well as hammer work, descaling etc. The other end we 'upset' to make a bodkin point, like armour piercing arrowheads! all the time maintaining the square edge, the shaft we did barley twists in two places. No gas torches, no pincers, just hammer anvil and forge. There's a lot of learning to be had from making something as simple as a poker.
Just something about a good glowing piece of metal
I don't have a forge yet but I have a torch. So I'm going to make me a poker and as you suggested I'll add the additional turns down the handle. Thanks for the inspiration.
Thanks John.
I've made a couple of these, but I shape the ring into an long oval so it becomes the handle and fits the hand well.
You made that forge weld look like I could do it. Thanks for your videos
You can do it!
i just found this channel like 5 minutes ago and im so glad i did
thank you for teaching this skill
your great sir...your one of my favorite americans 😁 your ideas are pure art...everthing has its meaning and isnt useless...every detail of your work is skill and know-how...great videos ✌
Good morning Sir, what a great idea! Thank you very much for the video. It is as you say, a great gift in winter season. Have a wonderful day Sir! Blessings!
Good morning and, thank you John for sharing another great instructional video. I was literally impressed with the ease in which you accomplished that Forge Weld.
The Poker turned out great. I think you're right, more length of the round rod is needed so the wrap would be longer to accommodate larger hands.
Overall all, I grade this video at 110% 👍.
Thanks again for sharing your talent with us.
Stan
I don’t have a torch so thank you for showing a method without using one!
just poking around banking on finding some great videos of yours.
Wow that looks great
It looks great & just in time for Christmas.
Very nice poker. I enjoy seeing the bending and other non anvil work.
One of the things I love about your videos is how often you say, "...but not everyone has [insert tool here] so I'm going to show you how to do it without one."
Nice just where I was looking for thank you great job 👍
That's a nice one little project
Another fine lesson.
Hey John, thank you for taking the time to do these videos. I'm brand new to Smithing and watch your video's daily, so thank you again!!
Really enjoyed this video. Thank you for posting.
I really like the handle design on this poker, and since i need to work on my forge welding, i may have to try building one, thanks John!
Great project! Was just thinking about making a fire poker for the family, very timely, thank you!
Hi John its 3am in Australia I'm just looking for something to ease the mind mate .
So thanks John your projects all ways help , I will make a dozen of the pokers for
friends and family so thanks again mate . cheers. (:
Well, John, you taught me a good tip in this video. When making pokers like this (usually out of 3/8" square rod), I have trouble keeping the weld from splitting when making the curved "hook" part. I never thought to clamp it in the vise to keep the weld from splitting. Thanks for the tip!! I guess you *can* teach old dogs new tricks, LOL.
If the "weld" is splitting, then it isn't welded. Try taking the heat just a little higher/hotter or longer in the heat soak for the welding.
@@thomasarussellsr Good point.
The problem with multiple welding heats on this style tip is that they get too thin so one heat with a slightly less that perfect weld is better than the thin spindly point.
@@BlackBearForge That's precisely the problem I was having. Too thin of a point might tend to bend if one isn't careful and leaves it in the stove or campfire too long. Thin tip-hot fire, not good!
Love the Bat'leth bottle opener! And the poker is awesome too! So... In the words of the Klingons... Qapla'! (Success)
I love watching your videos. But identifying stuff from star trek, that was amazing. Thanks for making my day.
Just found your UA-cam channel. I enjoy how you talk . You make it easy to understand. I'll enjoy going back and watching your videos. Thank you so much ric from wnc
That's beautiful. Good job.
Holy smokes! Color grade video! Production value is going up. Projects are going strong. Well done!!!
Great tutorial, thank you very much!
Good morning!
Always fun watching your videos!
I would love to learn under you I want to be a blacksmith but I'm only 19 and it's hard for me to get a proper forge I watch alot of videos like this just learning basic stuff but the way you explained things is so easy for me to understand
Keep the interest alive and before you know it you'll be able to start acquiring the tools and equipment you need. A good start is getting involved with a local group.
this looks great extra wraps not needed
Awesome video
Really appreciate the content
Hi John thanks for all the big shows happy Thanksgiving God bless you and your family
Ya with more spirals it will look more beautiful but it already look awesome. Nice video. 👍👍👍👍🔥🔥🔥
I really hate to suggest something to a pro like yourself, but I used to build wire fences that we wrapped wire over wire much like you are doing on loop end, to do this we used a tube a little larger ID of the wire OD and could slip the tube over the wire and get very tight wraps because the fulcrum was right next to what I was wrapping around. a 2 foot piece of 1/2 ID pipe would do the job here. Again I hate to throw in my two cents but I believe it would speed your wrapping and give give you a very tight wrap. Have a wonderful thanks giving and I hope this is taken in the spirit of thanks I have for your great You Tube channel
I think that bat'leth would look cool with a mini stand to hang it from..... double hook style so it can hang as if it was hanging on a wall 🙂 Your poker cam out looking nice and having the really long rap for the handle sounds quite cool 👍👍👍
I love your videos. Keep up the good work. I'm going to build my own forge because of your great videos :). Greetings from Europe (Slovenia).
Your content is so wholesome. So thank you for it. Please keep on rocking and forging.
I really enjoyed this project and the tips you gave thank you and keep up the good work
Table looks great!👍
Maestro, ¿ qué le añadió para que fusionara ese extremo ?....excelente trabajo......siempre hay algo por aprender y comprender., abundancia, prosperidad, amor, salud, alegría, armonía...para ud y su familia...hare krishna
I'm going to buy some real anvil soon (and replace my old cast iron block) and I think that something like this would be one of my first show of skill for friends. Also need to learn forge welding and that looks not so hard.
Thanks for video!
I like the idea of the longer wrapped handle.
In the Battleth, just a small adjustment/offset on one end, and a sharpen, and it could likely be a can opener too. Something to think about anyway. A hand operated can opener so you can open those pork-n-beans during a power outage. There's a project idea.
Great job!!!! Love watching your videos. Keep doing what you doing please!!! Thanks
I'd love to see a wrapped handle on square stock with a pineapple twist a third of the way down the bar from the handle to the poker end.
Super profesore
I have a video idea for you. I noticed when you took the round bar and put it into the fire, you flipped up a little metal holder. Could you do a video on how to make one of those holders to support your extra metal?
Awesome poker, my brother has a wood burner in his living room and that would've made a great Christmas present, had I seen this sooner. Anyway, great video, I learn more every video I watch. I'm not sure if I'm going to try forging myself yet, but I really enjoy watching it done.
very nice
This is what I look for to become when I'm older
Great simple little fire poker john :-) also great video presentation! Hope you and your family are doing well
Thanks 👍
You should make a worf action figure with fasteners and other metal odds and ends all welded up :) that would be pretty cool
Thanks for sharing with us John, that’s a great fire poker you made. Take care and have a good Thanksgiving. Fred. 👍👍👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
John- If perhaps you could mark the round bars w/ soap stone in such a way that folks can better see the rotations- maybe just a line running with the length of the bar, just for a visual reference. Thanks for all your efforts! JBR
Great idea. It is hard to see how he is manuvering the material. Maybe a stripe marked down one side so we can see if he is spinning it or going back and forth, even in square-bar it is sometimes hard to see if the camera us not zoomed in.
I Trek, I approve. If you're at all interested I recommend watching the DS9 episode where Quark (bar tender) gets married to a Klingon. Seems appropriate.
Nice job all ways interesting to watch.like your videos.
Glad you like them!
Great straightforward design and a fun forge weld. Would make nice Christmas presents. I am curious how it would look using square stock. Thanks as always for what you do.
Hello John
Thank you for this toutorial Video
This firepoker is a good piece to learn
And by the way i think you are a little Trecky as i do too
All the best for the next week and stay healthy
Yours Frank
You are right!
riverside Iowa is my neck of the woods lol
A lovely poker any fire would enjoy to be poked by! Thanks Kindly! DaveyJO in Pennsylvania
très beau travail: bravo ;))
Keep them coming, sometime simple are great. Happy Thanksgiving
At 7:05 when you are grabbing the steel I mistook the rusty red color for heat and thought you were superhuman. Well, we know you are, but it would have been proof haha
Next time all you have to do is bring your wrap material down beside the shaft side you want to wrap. 10 inches is plenty. Get both sides hot and twist them together in a vise. Now it's going to twist both but you get the same effect with less material.
I have used tat technique in the past. But I see it as a completely different finished element
Cool
Love ur videos. Im forging forna whilennow. But the forge welding still wont work for me
Happy Thanksgiving John. I'll be asking my folks if they want a fireplace set. They will never use the fireplace but the hearth does need something...
By the time I got doen with this project, my wife would ask, "Is it supposed be all wavy and off to one side?" "It's for poking fires that are around the corner." I'd reply.
Happy Thanksgiving John!🦃
Thanks 👍
You can also hot cut the poker in
You can but you need a much greater mass of material to start with or you end up with a point and hook that bend easily ua-cam.com/video/wb71qijSPRM/v-deo.html
I need some 3/8 round stock... maybe draw out some of my 1/2 would do thanks for the video John!
I might just make the poker a little heavier and use the 1/2" as is
Wow an instant notification for once
nice
Looks great.
Wondering what the overall length the fire poker is?
I would like to share a picture.
Thumbs up.
Are you going to quench that poker?
Mind over Metal forge would like to ask
When you talk about waxing projects you've completed is there anything special or specific about the wax you use?
I use Johnsons paste wax, but bees wax is also good