This whole episode was kind of a dumpster fire. 🤣 Both guys getting burnt with the dry ice, Alec singeing his hair, the clamping fiasco, etc. I loved it.
First rule of dry ice: don't fucking touch dry ice That's not hyperbole. It is, quite literally, the first rule listed in a lot of the lists of rules and laws for using dry ice.
Cold ice: -70C, gives *cold burns* . "Oo lemme touch that". Dry ice is how you can see snow on Mars, it's that cold here, cold enough to turn gas into snow.
A tip for getting the oxygen out of the envelope- put a little piece of paper in with the blade. It will burn off all the oxygen inside. Funnily enough, Jamie's comment about the return slip was right on the money!
ALEC - QUICK TIP! IF you are going to use the Steel foil 'Envelope' trick.... BEFORE you seal up the envelope with the blade inside, HEAT the envelope and knife up FIRST BEFORE SEALING IT UP. This drives out the 'Air'/oxygen from the 'Envelope', and then while it is STILL HOT, fold over the last seal. This is why you see those little 'Buttons' on jars of food, the jars are filled with warm/hot food contents, then sealed, the process drives out the air/oxygen and thus causing a vacuum inside... This will help STOP the envelop 'Puffing up' on the heat treatment/hardening cycle 👍 😎🇬🇧
I've absolutely loved watching your channel throughout the years. What if you revisited some past projects? Taking a look at old swords and fun projects and demonstrating how you might handle things differently with your current wealth of knowledge, tools, and techniques could be a fun series
yeah, it would be nice to see more of the old swords. His channel lost me when he moved back to UK and left his USA workshop behind.... there were some weird videos about his new home.... it was a weird time and then I lost interest. Didn't bother to watch his vides after that, because i didn't see any new projects that captured my interest
One feature of this knife you forgot to mention. The grey circle is serradet and connected to the blade. It is designed that way so you can open it with the thickest of gloves and don’t need to fiddle with the thumbnail hole on the blade to open it. Makes it easy to open one handed as well. I love this knife and it is my daily carry as a park ranger. Cheap, easy to find if you drop it, hooks on your beltloop with a carabiner and goes through rope in one cut.
Great video, recommend placing a small strip of paper inside the stainless wrap to burn up any excess oxygen trapped inside during preheating, a long used method in this style of heat treating.
I would recommend getting a nice pair of cut resistant gloves for working with materials like the steel foil. You get a really good amount of dexterity while also preventing some really bad cuts that could end up worse than you would initially think.
I could not stop repeating the part where Alec picks up the dry ice and gets burned. It was just so funny to me. Watching them experience dry ice for the first time like cave men touching fire.😂
You've been making a lot more intricate items lately, would you ever consider trying to make a butterfly knife? I think you might be surprised by the accuracy which is required to make a good one!
@@guy_withglasses all butterfly knives, whether sharp or blunt are illegal to own/possess in the UK. They are just banned outright. Unless the knife is over 100 years old (n/a here). So unless he were to make one in his Montana (where it is legal to own one afaik) workshop... it's not going to happen.
@@guy_withglasses they are banned, sharpened or trainer doesn't matter in this case. Just like all punch knives, sharp or not are illegal. UK politicians hate knives.
I've been waiting on waiting on Alec to discover the pivot hinge. However, Alec discusses his proposed knife alterations, I hold up my Gerber Remix knife and raise an eyebrow. Also, props to Alec to find the safer cold bath. I had to do a search for dry ice alcohol baths. My organic chemistry classes told me dry ice and acetone for -78C. Apparently isopropyl alcohol (the naming of which would cause my organic teacher eye twitches) reaches the same temperature when mixed with dry ice.
You're not supposed to just hold dry ice with your bare hands it can easily burn your skin. You can touch it for a few seconds but if you squeeze a chunk or hold it for awhile you will do damage.
If you’re careful it’s easy to not get hurt. It’s like handling a really hot tortilla, as long as you keep it moving around you won’t get hurt. I’ve messed around with dry ice for years, most of the time bare handed, and I’ve never gotten a burn from it
I did my first cryo treatment on a blade using dry ice. When the box arrived and I opened the shipping box the first thing I saw was a leaflet with safety instructions on what not to do with it. I think this will be a nice knife.
Definitely a good thing that dry ice wasn't in block form. It would've stuck to you and turn the skin straight off potentially doing permanent damage. I saw it happen as a kid.
Holding the dry ice with bare hands was something special. I understand that it was done out of ignorance. We all learn at some point, but wow. Hope you didn't get frost bite that stuff is -109°F (-78.5°C)
I have several scars from trying to burn off warts. I found a doctor who uses a chemical blistering agent. It works far better than anything else I've tried, and it's slightly less painful than dry ice.
I use a CRKT knife where the hole for the carabiner is at the bottom of the handle and prevents the knife from opening when clipped. Might be something worth considering in this design. It's the CRKT NIAD
Yes Alex, dry ice can freeze burn you. What I thought was hilarious was the Jamie followed him straight up after seeing it burn Alex. Like they say about who invented bull riding. The guy that invented it wasn't the problem, it was the guy that watched him and thought it would be a good idea to try it too.
Hey Alec, I just saw a post on the Witcher subreddit from Nathan, the guy who bought Mr. Pilkington. I thought it was funny seeing him in the wild and thought you'd like to know Mr. Pilkington is still out there hammering hot steel into works of art. Cheers from southern California.
Jamie I’m glad I’m not the only one that foresaw that clamp slipping lmao. And yes dry ice is supercooled co2 and should always be handled with gloves - even welding gloves
I just came back to your channel after a few years and I gotta say, this video was really awesome, but! I just don't see the energy in you anymore. I remember when you were full of energy all the time, flipping all the tools, running up and down, and even when you were talking you were the happiest and most energetic person, just because you wanted to work. Now I just cannot hear the excitement in your voice that you had. Nice video tho. Glad to see you still make quality content.
@AlecSteele 8:44 I found a much better way of lighting the forge, I use a ferrocerium rod to light some 0000 steel wool, then toss it in the forge before turning on the air, then turn on the gas last. The air keeps the ember in the steel wool going nice and hot, and then bringing in the gas lets the forge light up nice and gentle, with no hair loss or scary blasts. It only takes a small scrap of steel wool, and you can fish it back out easily, so nothing soots up the inside of the forge.
I've had a Gerber remix for years and years. Knife with a hole like that is such a great design. I take it climbing and back country skiing and the design never fails.
ALEC - QUICK TIP! IF you are going to use the Steel foil 'Envelope' trick.... BEFORE you seal up the envelope with the blade inside, HEAT the envelope and knife up FIRST BEFORE SEALING IT UP. This drives out the 'Air'/oxygen from the 'Envelope', and then while it is STILL HOT, fold over the last seal. This is why you see those little 'Buttons' on jars of food, the jars are filled with warm/hot food contents, then sealed thus causing a vacuum inside... This will help STOP the envelop 'Puffing up' on the heat treatment/hardening cycle 👍 😎🇬🇧
Three folds per side to keep the envelope air tight as possible. I used a small roller to seal it . Or use a rubber mallet to lessen the risk of puncturing the foil. Get your hands on an industrial scissors to cut that foil. You will cut yourself on that stuff almost every time. no matter how long you have been working with it.
The slot on the blade is actually really important. It's there so that if you have only one hand available you can open it with your tongue. I should know: I have about three million years of climbing experience.
I am so happy you went back to a more relaxed style of video.
Рік тому+1
Maybe you could add a thermal sensor (thermocouple) to the forge, or maybe use pyrometer / infrared camera to measure the temperature of the steel taken out of forge (or in the forge), or the cryo bath?
Dry ice turns to gas when you touch it, so it doesn’t suck much heat out of your fingers unless you get it stuck somewhere. The cooled down alcohol however will give you serious frost burns. It is sticky and thick like maple syrup, so it sticks to your skin while it freezes it to death. You should therefore be extremely carefull around it
I'm a climber, canyoneer, and knife enthusiast and in all my time in these hobbies I haven't found a knife specifically made for climbing that has a carabineer hole and a sheepsfoot or Wharncliffe blade. I just don't see the use of a drop point. The edge is what you want so why not take away the tip, that way if a rope is tightly wrapped around someone's limb (which I have seen happen a few times) you can press the sheepsfoot tip against the skin to safely get under the rope and cut out. White water knives are made for this scenario so why not the vertical world??
AEBL is the finest grained, most sharply sharpenable steel I’ve worked with. It got sharper than anything else I’ve used. Made a steak knife set and was push shaving, not slice shaving, the hair on the base of my neck. I was definitely impressed with it. Quenched in dry ice and alcohol as well.
As a mountaineer, rock climber, that cut out in the knifes spine is that way, as not to deploy in case you have to scramble about, while climbing, rappelling, etc Rope that is under tension cuts very easily, especially with a knife. Having any chance of accidental opening is not a good thing. A knob can snag open, the likelihood of a rock opening the cutout is very slim, plus if wearing gloves it gives better purchase on the blade. Look at Benchmade/ Spyderco knives that are designed for search and rescue. Most it not all use a cutout for a reason.
Now that you're back in UK, would it be possible for you to revisit your old Norwich workshop? I'm certain someone else is using it now, but perhaps they'd allow you to stop by? I'm not going to lie, I miss the good ol' chef with his little loft ♥ may he RIP
Fun fact about dry ice: it doesn’t melt, that’s why it’s “dry” ice. Instead, it sublimates - immediate state change from solid to gas with no liquid state.
you've done engraving and inlaying. Id love to see you try damascening. You should look it up its a really cool process and I think it'd look excellent on a sword hilt or something
The moment Alec put his hand in that Styrofoam box I knew this was gonna be one of those days... Don't EVER touch dry ice with your bare skin. It can freezer burn you in seconds as Alec apparently JUST learned. 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
I might have misunderstood you but as I see it you are planning to connect the small lever to the bottom of the knife as well as the pivot point/ hinge, I cant really see this surviving more than the first couple of openings (especially if you want it to fold against the arch). if you want to make the lock part of the frame and use the steel springiness instead of an actual spring (and that a good idea considering that this will likely be dirty when you want to use it) maybe try left to right movement of the lock instead of up and down?
My dad used to bring dry ice home from his lab and drop it in our bath when I was a kid. It bubbled amazingly and made a great layer of 'fog' in the bath (CO2 fog actually; probably not very safe in retrospect). It really hurt when it stuck to your skin, though...
As soon as I saw him opening the box of Dry Ice my immediate thought was "Where's your PPE?" For a frame of reference about how long Dry Ice can last before it completely sublimates, once at work I left a box of dry ice out to sublimate so the box could be sent back and it took a week for it all to go away. The box was worthless by that point though because while the ice was warming up it was also cooling off the air making the water condense on the box so it was turning moldy. Incidentally that's why it felt like it was sucking the skin into it, it is so cold that it was literally freezing the fluids in your body, (Incidentally the freezing temperature of the human body is -17.8 C, which is 0 F, it's not arbitrary that's what 0 F was defined as. So anything below that can damage your skin if you come into bear contact with it.)
Just an idea, could you please consider creating some 1h30, 2h long videos of past projects like the katana, the viking or the zweihender? A bit like what Colin Furze did with his tunnel videos, just stitch them together. I mean all these XX parts series are pure gold that are waiting for new viewers!
While hindsight is 20/20 and I'm not the one doing, I did foresee some issues trying to create pressure while clamping a round surface with a regular clamp. Glad no one was hurt
You can purchase bags of dry ice from your local larger grocery stores in the US, and overseas. It might save you a bit of money rather than shipping it in!
Watching both alec and Jamie burn their hands with dry ice is possibly the funniest things I've seen all day, much love but seriously don't hold dry ice lol
Can you make a knife out of coins? Id love to see what patterns you get. Maybe do it out of multiple different countries coins all together for a coller pattern?
Your videos are great man, but I think you need to get a heat treatment oven, it's time, for this stainless steels you need accuracy, and it'll be a nice series of videos to watch, the making of the HT oven
"We are not going to get a terribly precise heat..." Don't you have two very nice Paragon Ovens that would be just smashing at this? Come home Alec, we still have snow on the Beartooths.
I always wanted to get in to tool and weapons forging but I was never sure of the rules surrounding it, I believe this is his uk set up, so can we make what ever we like or are the laws against making certain things.... any information would be great (just FYI I'm talking uk rules only as ya know I'm a brit lol)
This whole episode was kind of a dumpster fire. 🤣 Both guys getting burnt with the dry ice, Alec singeing his hair, the clamping fiasco, etc. I loved it.
I winced when he just picked it up bare-handed.
First rule of dry ice: don't fucking touch dry ice
That's not hyperbole. It is, quite literally, the first rule listed in a lot of the lists of rules and laws for using dry ice.
He's from Norfolk UK, standard stuff really! 🤣🤣
@@HalfdeadRider normal for Norfolk!
@@DonOblivious lol. This is exactly what I said to my screen when I saw him grab the dry ice.
Cold ice: -70C, gives *cold burns* .
"Oo lemme touch that".
Dry ice is how you can see snow on Mars, it's that cold here, cold enough to turn gas into snow.
"that cold here"
How's life on Mars, homie?
A tip for getting the oxygen out of the envelope- put a little piece of paper in with the blade. It will burn off all the oxygen inside.
Funnily enough, Jamie's comment about the return slip was right on the money!
Lol, that's great.
That must be why in sealed (or as best can be) canisters I see forgers putting in dried chillis.
@@stevenwest1494 Shurap does that for the pun of "sharp" and "spicy" being the same word in Ukrainian
I actually thought he brought up the return adress for that exact reason at first.
ALEC - QUICK TIP! IF you are going to use the Steel foil 'Envelope' trick.... BEFORE you seal up the envelope with the blade inside, HEAT the envelope and knife up FIRST BEFORE SEALING IT UP. This drives out the 'Air'/oxygen from the 'Envelope', and then while it is STILL HOT, fold over the last seal. This is why you see those little 'Buttons' on jars of food, the jars are filled with warm/hot food contents, then sealed, the process drives out the air/oxygen and thus causing a vacuum inside...
This will help STOP the envelop 'Puffing up' on the heat treatment/hardening cycle 👍 😎🇬🇧
I've absolutely loved watching your channel throughout the years.
What if you revisited some past projects? Taking a look at old swords and fun projects and demonstrating how you might handle things differently with your current wealth of knowledge, tools, and techniques could be a fun series
That's a great idea
yeah, it would be nice to see more of the old swords. His channel lost me when he moved back to UK and left his USA workshop behind.... there were some weird videos about his new home.... it was a weird time and then I lost interest. Didn't bother to watch his vides after that, because i didn't see any new projects that captured my interest
@@TmdXD And despite not watching any of his videos since the move back here you are commenting on Alec's latest video.
That would be pretty cool!
Yeah, I'm curious how the 1 Million layer Katana is doing.
One feature of this knife you forgot to mention. The grey circle is serradet and connected to the blade. It is designed that way so you can open it with the thickest of gloves and don’t need to fiddle with the thumbnail hole on the blade to open it. Makes it easy to open one handed as well.
I love this knife and it is my daily carry as a park ranger. Cheap, easy to find if you drop it, hooks on your beltloop with a carabiner and goes through rope in one cut.
Didn't even think about the colour but finding it easily is ofc an actual feature
Great video, recommend placing a small strip of paper inside the stainless wrap to burn up any excess oxygen trapped inside during preheating, a long used method in this style of heat treating.
Wow thats smart!
Wow thats smart!
@@barnett25 You’ve also gotta make a nice floral tea or the blade will never turn out right.
@@barnett25 i always asked myself why he puts this stuff in now i know tanks
@barnett25 the words for spicy and sharp are the same in his language, so he can say it adds sharpness to the blade.. Best smithing pun ever, imho.
I would recommend getting a nice pair of cut resistant gloves for working with materials like the steel foil. You get a really good amount of dexterity while also preventing some really bad cuts that could end up worse than you would initially think.
I could not stop repeating the part where Alec picks up the dry ice and gets burned. It was just so funny to me. Watching them experience dry ice for the first time like cave men touching fire.😂
You've been making a lot more intricate items lately, would you ever consider trying to make a butterfly knife? I think you might be surprised by the accuracy which is required to make a good one!
He'd have to escape the prison island of UK to be able to make one legally
@@atronachh i mean, who said it has to be sharp, he can just make a trainer...
@@guy_withglasses all butterfly knives, whether sharp or blunt are illegal to own/possess in the UK. They are just banned outright. Unless the knife is over 100 years old (n/a here). So unless he were to make one in his Montana (where it is legal to own one afaik) workshop... it's not going to happen.
@@MaxRide1 I don't believe trainers are illegal... they're classified as fidget toys if anything
@@guy_withglasses they are banned, sharpened or trainer doesn't matter in this case.
Just like all punch knives, sharp or not are illegal.
UK politicians hate knives.
I've been waiting on waiting on Alec to discover the pivot hinge.
However, Alec discusses his proposed knife alterations, I hold up my Gerber Remix knife and raise an eyebrow.
Also, props to Alec to find the safer cold bath. I had to do a search for dry ice alcohol baths. My organic chemistry classes told me dry ice and acetone for -78C. Apparently isopropyl alcohol (the naming of which would cause my organic teacher eye twitches) reaches the same temperature when mixed with dry ice.
You're not supposed to just hold dry ice with your bare hands it can easily burn your skin. You can touch it for a few seconds but if you squeeze a chunk or hold it for awhile you will do damage.
If you’re careful it’s easy to not get hurt. It’s like handling a really hot tortilla, as long as you keep it moving around you won’t get hurt. I’ve messed around with dry ice for years, most of the time bare handed, and I’ve never gotten a burn from it
I'm pretty sure he figured that out in this video.
I did my first cryo treatment on a blade using dry ice. When the box arrived and I opened the shipping box the first thing I saw was a leaflet with safety instructions on what not to do with it.
I think this will be a nice knife.
The moment when he said "it feels like im burning my hand" I literally shouted 'you are you idiot! don't do that!"
I figured that one in my youth playing with the fog machine on Halloween
Definitely a good thing that dry ice wasn't in block form. It would've stuck to you and turn the skin straight off potentially doing permanent damage. I saw it happen as a kid.
Holding the dry ice with bare hands was something special. I understand that it was done out of ignorance. We all learn at some point, but wow. Hope you didn't get frost bite that stuff is -109°F (-78.5°C)
I f-ing love this channel
Me too!
Dry ice is often used to burn off warts - def something to be mindful of when Billying around 😁
I have several scars from trying to burn off warts.
I found a doctor who uses a chemical blistering agent. It works far better than anything else I've tried, and it's slightly less painful than dry ice.
Alec : "Ow, that hurt!"
Jamie: "Let me try."
Ok... Alec is on fire with this climbing series, keep doing it!
Going by this video, you may end up being *literally* correct as this series progresses.
6:22 and now Alex has discovered why dry ice needs gloves. :)
I use a CRKT knife where the hole for the carabiner is at the bottom of the handle and prevents the knife from opening when clipped. Might be something worth considering in this design. It's the CRKT NIAD
Yes Alex, dry ice can freeze burn you. What I thought was hilarious was the Jamie followed him straight up after seeing it burn Alex. Like they say about who invented bull riding. The guy that invented it wasn't the problem, it was the guy that watched him and thought it would be a good idea to try it too.
Hey Alec, I just saw a post on the Witcher subreddit from Nathan, the guy who bought Mr. Pilkington. I thought it was funny seeing him in the wild and thought you'd like to know Mr. Pilkington is still out there hammering hot steel into works of art. Cheers from southern California.
Jamie I’m glad I’m not the only one that foresaw that clamp slipping lmao. And yes dry ice is supercooled co2 and should always be handled with gloves - even welding gloves
I just came back to your channel after a few years and I gotta say, this video was really awesome, but!
I just don't see the energy in you anymore. I remember when you were full of energy all the time, flipping all the tools, running up and down, and even when you were talking you were the happiest and most energetic person, just because you wanted to work. Now I just cannot hear the excitement in your voice that you had. Nice video tho. Glad to see you still make quality content.
@AlecSteele
8:44
I found a much better way of lighting the forge, I use a ferrocerium rod to light some 0000 steel wool, then toss it in the forge before turning on the air, then turn on the gas last. The air keeps the ember in the steel wool going nice and hot, and then bringing in the gas lets the forge light up nice and gentle, with no hair loss or scary blasts. It only takes a small scrap of steel wool, and you can fish it back out easily, so nothing soots up the inside of the forge.
The Alec and Jaime show!!! Always the best!
I've had a Gerber remix for years and years. Knife with a hole like that is such a great design. I take it climbing and back country skiing and the design never fails.
I feel like this is the slippery slope of caving tool making, at some point Alec is going to make a diving bottle and regulator on a power hammer
ALEC - QUICK TIP! IF you are going to use the Steel foil 'Envelope' trick.... BEFORE you seal up the envelope with the blade inside, HEAT the envelope and knife up FIRST BEFORE SEALING IT UP. This drives out the 'Air'/oxygen from the 'Envelope', and then while it is STILL HOT, fold over the last seal. This is why you see those little 'Buttons' on jars of food, the jars are filled with warm/hot food contents, then sealed thus causing a vacuum inside...
This will help STOP the envelop 'Puffing up' on the heat treatment/hardening cycle 👍 😎🇬🇧
hey Alec, can you make a bread knife oneday? i think it would be interesting to see how you achieve the serrated edge
Three folds per side to keep the envelope air tight as possible. I used a small roller to seal it . Or use a rubber mallet to lessen the risk of puncturing the foil. Get your hands on an industrial scissors to cut that foil. You will cut yourself on that stuff almost every time. no matter how long you have been working with it.
I screamed when Jamie was going to put his hand on dryice slurry, do not do that! Totally different level in frostbite than small dry-dryice block.
The slot on the blade is actually really important. It's there so that if you have only one hand available you can open it with your tongue. I should know: I have about three million years of climbing experience.
Really enjoyed the stock removal making as a change from the forging. Both are awesome, just enjoying the different content.
I am so happy you went back to a more relaxed style of video.
Maybe you could add a thermal sensor (thermocouple) to the forge, or maybe use pyrometer / infrared camera to measure the temperature of the steel taken out of forge (or in the forge), or the cryo bath?
Awesome design. Can't wait to see more videos soon my friend.
i hope alec does some rock climbing stuff too... it would be the coolest so see him collab with the wide boys!
Dry ice turns to gas when you touch it, so it doesn’t suck much heat out of your fingers unless you get it stuck somewhere. The cooled down alcohol however will give you serious frost burns. It is sticky and thick like maple syrup, so it sticks to your skin while it freezes it to death. You should therefore be extremely carefull around it
10:44 Alec laughs just like Ricky Gervais. So funny
@10:20 "It's gonna spew out molten gasses." My engineering heart is laughing and crying at the same time XD
I'm an amateur knife maker and I can't stop envying Alec everytime I see his belt grinder. ( Cos I don't have one)
I'm a climber, canyoneer, and knife enthusiast and in all my time in these hobbies I haven't found a knife specifically made for climbing that has a carabineer hole and a sheepsfoot or Wharncliffe blade. I just don't see the use of a drop point. The edge is what you want so why not take away the tip, that way if a rope is tightly wrapped around someone's limb (which I have seen happen a few times) you can press the sheepsfoot tip against the skin to safely get under the rope and cut out. White water knives are made for this scenario so why not the vertical world??
Alec is slowly turning into a medieval dwarf, first blacksmithing now caves...
Soon a bearded bald man and his son, which he calls boy, will ask him to upgrade his ax
@@tbread1128 haha totally
AEBL is the finest grained, most sharply sharpenable steel I’ve worked with. It got sharper than anything else I’ve used. Made a steak knife set and was push shaving, not slice shaving, the hair on the base of my neck. I was definitely impressed with it. Quenched in dry ice and alcohol as well.
As a mountaineer, rock climber, that cut out in the knifes spine is that way, as not to deploy in case you have to scramble about, while climbing, rappelling, etc
Rope that is under tension cuts very easily, especially with a knife.
Having any chance of accidental opening is not a good thing.
A knob can snag open, the likelihood of a rock opening the cutout is very slim, plus if wearing gloves it gives better purchase on the blade.
Look at Benchmade/ Spyderco knives that are designed for search and rescue.
Most it not all use a cutout for a reason.
Dry ice feels like it burns you because it does lmao
It's solid carbon dioxide, my guy! The stuff sublimates at -57C (70F).
Love the climbing content! Have you considered making climbing holds from steel?
Now that you're back in UK, would it be possible for you to revisit your old Norwich workshop?
I'm certain someone else is using it now, but perhaps they'd allow you to stop by?
I'm not going to lie, I miss the good ol' chef with his little loft ♥ may he RIP
No one is using it, still empty in quite a poor state.
Fun fact about dry ice: it doesn’t melt, that’s why it’s “dry” ice. Instead, it sublimates - immediate state change from solid to gas with no liquid state.
Immediate change from solid to gas, like beans.
This would be perfect as a sailing knife if it also had a shackle key and marlin spike for untying knots as well!
You should do a climbing collab with some of the UK based climbing youtubers!!
you've done engraving and inlaying. Id love to see you try damascening. You should look it up its a really cool process and I think it'd look excellent on a sword hilt or something
The moment Alec put his hand in that Styrofoam box I knew this was gonna be one of those days...
Don't EVER touch dry ice with your bare skin. It can freezer burn you in seconds as Alec apparently JUST learned.
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
I might have misunderstood you but as I see it you are planning to connect the small lever to the bottom of the knife as well as the pivot point/ hinge, I cant really see this surviving more than the first couple of openings (especially if you want it to fold against the arch). if you want to make the lock part of the frame and use the steel springiness instead of an actual spring (and that a good idea considering that this will likely be dirty when you want to use it) maybe try left to right movement of the lock instead of up and down?
My dad used to bring dry ice home from his lab and drop it in our bath when I was a kid. It bubbled amazingly and made a great layer of 'fog' in the bath (CO2 fog actually; probably not very safe in retrospect). It really hurt when it stuck to your skin, though...
I've been watching for awhile when you were in your first workshop I think. Is this your first time making a pocket knife?
Hahahahaha absolutely love this episode. Very enjoyable.
Yeah.... As others have said, dry ice can burn very quickly. Like, immediate frostbite.
It's suggested to only ever handle it with gloves... 😂
Have just realized: every time Alec asks someone behind camera, it goes like: Jamie, can you... Joe Rogan in his podcasts does the same thing :D
Hells yes! I was so hoping you'd make more stuff geared towards climbing equipment.
To get the oxygen out of your envelope, put in some paper. It will burn and use all the O while the blade heats up. Paper burns at 450 degrees F.
You have welded copper into demascus, but you need to weld makume gane into demascus
wonderful sync-cut whit the montage ^^
Man, this is a Blacksmith channel isn't it? So forge the blade man! we like to see it! Just cutting is dimmining of your skills, and u have them!!
Alright time for some legendary bladesmithing like usual! ... Oh. Oh he's... Oh. Ok.
*Disappointment noises*
Finally some good old blue dychem without any nonsense.
I am missing the song/jingle though
As soon as I saw him opening the box of Dry Ice my immediate thought was "Where's your PPE?" For a frame of reference about how long Dry Ice can last before it completely sublimates, once at work I left a box of dry ice out to sublimate so the box could be sent back and it took a week for it all to go away. The box was worthless by that point though because while the ice was warming up it was also cooling off the air making the water condense on the box so it was turning moldy.
Incidentally that's why it felt like it was sucking the skin into it, it is so cold that it was literally freezing the fluids in your body, (Incidentally the freezing temperature of the human body is -17.8 C, which is 0 F, it's not arbitrary that's what 0 F was defined as. So anything below that can damage your skin if you come into bear contact with it.)
You don’t have to clamp between aluminum. Steel works just as good. Also reheating AEBL can be kinda sketchy. It can crack on the reheat.
Alec started the video so quick I felt like I was late for class.
The fact that this is not made from Damascus is shocking me
a fancy ash tray to go with the lighter build would be cool.
Make a Damascus steel tapping wrench, to add to your Damascus steel tool collection 😁😁
The burnt hair part was pretty funny. You 2 are way too funny. This was a great video
Pausing the video to say damn... There's some talent going on here for sure. Great work.
Not bad.. How about a nice small project like a stainless steel Damascus ice axe next 👍
Just an idea, could you please consider creating some 1h30, 2h long videos of past projects like the katana, the viking or the zweihender?
A bit like what Colin Furze did with his tunnel videos, just stitch them together. I mean all these XX parts series are pure gold that are waiting for new viewers!
Make a shield with engravings Alec !!
While hindsight is 20/20 and I'm not the one doing, I did foresee some issues trying to create pressure while clamping a round surface with a regular clamp.
Glad no one was hurt
You can purchase bags of dry ice from your local larger grocery stores in the US, and overseas. It might save you a bit of money rather than shipping it in!
Watching both alec and Jamie burn their hands with dry ice is possibly the funniest things I've seen all day, much love but seriously don't hold dry ice lol
Please try : Quench in GALLIUM! Quench in some metal!! 😉👊🍻
i really love your amateurish professionalism :D
Jamie had fun with this one
Can you make a knife out of coins? Id love to see what patterns you get. Maybe do it out of multiple different countries coins all together for a coller pattern?
The hole has two purposes one for opening and to loosen stuck shackle pins.
Always loved some crisps on the aeroplane
this is probably the most disastrous episode ive seen, love it!
In today's Alec and Jamie learn about freezer burn
Jeremy at Simple Little Life! The pro of wrapping blades in foil!!
Definitely use some threadlocker on those Chicago screws
It's the middle of the night and I laughed out loud, loudly, when he fubared the rounded aluminum 😂
Almost made me wake everyone in the house 😆
I love it that you making a knife again.
You may be able to purge the envelope with argon to help keep the oxygen out
I have doubts about having the flexible steel bit farther away from the pivot that the thumb button. Gonna be tough. Great job so far!
Your videos are great man, but I think you need to get a heat treatment oven, it's time, for this stainless steels you need accuracy, and it'll be a nice series of videos to watch, the making of the HT oven
This was incredible well edited!
YAY! Blue dykem is back!
"We are not going to get a terribly precise heat..."
Don't you have two very nice Paragon Ovens that would be just smashing at this? Come home Alec, we still have snow on the Beartooths.
I always wanted to get in to tool and weapons forging but I was never sure of the rules surrounding it, I believe this is his uk set up, so can we make what ever we like or are the laws against making certain things.... any information would be great (just FYI I'm talking uk rules only as ya know I'm a brit lol)
I think they usually put a piece of paper in the stainless pocket things so all the air is consumed once it gets hot and catches fire