I always like your video titles, i think it's time for you to change because your work is so amazing it deserves more views also i know you are not good at english, you have a lot of fans around you, you can ask for help to your beloved audience, that makes sense, thanks for your great video!!!
English translation often loses continuity, but you can see the same in other languages. His meanings are not lost and it gives character to his dialogue.
Primitive Skills you can run but you can't hide. The guys we're hiring the bikes from know you and the location of your tent. We even have one of your workers willing to give an interview. So let's do this amicable and arrange a meeting world exclusive interview and a tour of your tent. My email is open 24/7.
@@emmapeel5950 : @Primitive Skills has earlier videos that show the process from start to finish. The making of the charcoal. The collection of the ore. The preparation of the ore. The final Smelting of that ore to extract the iron. He then has videos showing him make each of the tools he uses. Don't let the Trolls convince you otherwise.
21:20 This shot of you forging in the rain is literally the culmination of everything that you have been working towards thus far ! I can not wait to see what's next ! Keep up the awesome work man ! Gửi đến bạn nhiều năng lượng tốt để bạn luôn an toàn và khỏe mạnh cho tương lai
Спасибо за русские субтитры. Большое спасибо за видео! Оставляю свой комментарий в поддержку канала! Всем добра и мирного неба над головой! Будьте здоровы!
I have long wanted to write about this channel. Express your admiration for this person. Who did not bring here nails building materials, came empty-handed. And everything that is made with his own hands.
He might be referring to the guy who gave him the idea for the water-powered bellows. Otherwise, wouldn't he have said 'I am a real genius'? If I'm not misinformed, 'that guy' might also have given him ideas for wood gearing as well... We'll see if he puts those into use. With gearing, you can increase speed or torque, so it would be really interesting to see what he does with it.
And you started with just a sharp rock and your bare hands, and made everything on camera, fair and square, without any outside help or materials. Not just your extreme capability, but also your determination to keep to your original plan, is amazing and inspiring.
yea, its clear its not all harvested by hand from scratch, the method is shown how its crafted and then is built with brought in materials. u can tell that after he shaped the shovel / machete, that he had bought pieces of mild steel and then worked from that.. still impressive. he even showed pieces of steel he brought from town to turn into chisel, and the concrete amount is entirely unrealistic to create that vast amount with the method shown ,
YOU HAVE BEEN DECEIVED! This is scamming, this guys looks like lived in Vietnam, probably trespassing forest and illegally ruined it for subs and money.
The rope he used to tie on his bellows is store bought. I give him credit for being more authentic than so many other ‘primitive’ channels…he does show you the methods, but he did purchase mild steel and he did purchase concrete, if not the majority of the blocks for the pond.
ngl. the real genius chad was the people from long ago that discovered these inventions and innovations. he just used them from what he have learned, and improvise a bit. then again, define genius.
I'm impressed at how quickly you advance on these projects! I'm also surprised that you've gotten as far as you have without a lathe; not even a basic bow lathe, from what I can see! Perhaps consider making a primitive chuck to attach to the waterwheel's shaft? A lathe can make better drive-shafts for future automation, since the more perfectly round and smooth they are, the less energy they waste on unwanted friction. Also, a waterwheel-powered drill might be a viable option if you want to bore holes of a standard diameter.
And using the waterwheel to power a potter's wheel would save you a lot of fuss and the pottery would be a lot easier to make. Having to kick the wheel every few seconds is not efficient.
@@susank4878 No the potters wheel does not need to be powered. He needs to make a sitting one that he can kick with his foot. Those wheels are quite easy to make. I went in to some details how to put one together pretty easy. He pretty much has one already just needs to build a frame and a bottom plate for spinning.
A lathe is not truly needed. The really only thing you need a lathe for is maybe for the water wheel and maybe a few carts other than that what doe you need one for. Effort spent could be doing other projects of more value.
Great job with automating the bellows it works great, although you might end up using more charcoal if you're making a new tool instead of swapping between bars since the bellows are always running, keep up the good work!
Yeah he might likely use more yet because its running the whole time you can do a half a dozen pieces at a time. This means while working one thing the other are heating up then its all about swapping out and start pounding. This is what a blacksmith helper would have done to keep the fire stoked and stuff ready. You would make dozens of things at once rather than one thing at a time in batches for the whole day. Effective even as a single worker.
It's totally possible that this iron bar for making the nails was originally rebar from a store. That's okay, because your channel is still awesome! I like the content very much.
Likely just round stock of mild steel. Lot of these chunks look like off cuts of bigger steel that might have been salvaged from the junk yard. Either way building a blacksmithing shop and working towards better things is clearly want we all want. Every time he does something its just better. Imagine in 10 years what we will see.
Hello Brother! You did great! Got some more nails and the blower setup! The place looks so peaceful, thank you for another beautiful video. Have a blessed day!
I've been following you for years now. You truly are gifted with knowledge. I hope that you have continued success, as I try to emulate some of your projects.
these videos are really great. I am really impressed by all this know-how accumulated over the years! What perseverance and what courage for this solitary work! well done ! I hope to see many more videos! Thank you from the heart !
I would add a full height stone wall on the back side and the water side of the smithy. This will prevent an earth slide. Also, add a stone floor and a nice stone box for the smithy. You could also include the furnace or oven in this buiding and rebuild it with stone bricks
If you make tongs, you can clamp nails with them and make hats for them by simply hitting a stone with a heated nail a couple of times, due to the fact that they are conical, they will hold well ..
I admire what you have achieved in 5 years, it is incomprehensible to the mind. Not to reproach you, but you can't work sitting in front of the anvil, you'll just get tired, you need your back to be straight, and when you hit the hammer, the elbow should be at an angle of 90 degrees. and then it will be much easier for you!
I wish he could take risk of injury very seriously as somehow he believes injuries are for the ill experienced . I say injuries get you when you least expect and when your confidence level is off the charts. Basic PPE is all we ask even if it's a primitive type. I am as sure he can come up with something.
@@kevinmakelane123 sorry, I didn't say anything about the injury, it was about comfort, it's just not convenient to forge sitting and you get tired quickly!
I saw so many survival videos but I do know ur my favourite 💓👊🏻❤️🙌 I watched ur all and still waiting for updates of ur nature palace 😍❤️ love u man 👊🏻💓💓😍
Wow. This guy really listens to everyone's idea. I remember someone's comment about using the waterfall to run an automated furnace blower and he set out and accomplished it. This is what a community is all about
I loved this so much. The whole new Smithy is beautiful. The camera shots from the forge while raining, and as it is getting darker are very lovely. As one smith to another. May I suggest that you make a valve in the pipe from the bellows to the forge to restrict the airflow if you need to reduce the heat of the forge. also will you still have enough elbow room to work at the grinding wheel? Looks a bit tight now. but that may just be the camera angle. Always love watching the progress and ingenuity of your little farm. Have a great week.
Hi Patrick, bom dia. Amo seus vídeos desde os primeiros. E agora estão ainda melhores. Você usando a criatividade para poupar o esfôrço humano. Sei que é capaz de transformar a energia hidráulica em força e luz. Parabéns 👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽 A Brasileira 🇧🇷
Wow, what a great and amazing video, it was interesting and educating. The mistake most people make is waiting till it is too late before investing. This is the time and season when bold steps are to be taken, wealth begins in the mind.
I love the fact you stressed on the words grabbing opportunities. But how will one know what to focus on, last year I invested into gold and got nothing meaningful
This is super awesome. I've always been facinated by 'simple' machinery and this chanel has been amazing. Also, I love your scenery shots. Watching that storm roll in was very cool.
You should make an opening on your pipe, so that you can stop the air flow to your fire because having à continuous air flow to your fire will multiply by 2 or 3 the amount of charcoal you will use!!! Great vid and forging!!
Not a fan of the title. It makes it look like clickbait... Which then introduces the thought process that your primitive videos are fake like the other primitive channels, which I know isnt true because Ive spent years watching you, but to a new watcher, they will think its fake.
Your water wheel will soon rot, destroying hundreds of hours of your labor. You should make a water bypass so the wheel will remain dry when not in use.
Excelente trabajo. Este invento, se materializó, fué un comentario que hice al respecto, de utlilizar para el fuelles, convertir un movimiento circular, en otro alternativo. Genial ejecución. Este video, vale 100 likes. Congratulations.
A suggestion for you to utilize your water wheel's rotational speed. Perhaps you could use it to create a more rapid water hammer by placing a gear teeth on the water wheel's outer rim. Then connect the gears to a levered hammer and you would have a water powered hammer. It would help raise your production efficiency as you no longer have to swing the hammer yourself and you can focus on crafting the tools you forge.
Hóy día,es lo mejor que se puede ver tanto en el móvil como en la tele con diferencia es instructivo 100%...entretenido. Aparte eres un manitas en todo y...la gran capacidad de crear todo típo de herramientas y comodidades como utensilios cada vez mejor...buscar todo típo de metales-alimentos-caza-siembra ect. Felicidades una vez mas. CHAPÓO.
10:33 Hmm. For longevity of the bellows, you probably want to put a barrier of some kind between the clay and the wood... Concrete would be good too, but you'd still want a barrier between the concrete and the bellows. You need to keep it as dry as possible, so maybe creating a base out of concrete, then forming some planks of wood to conform to the shape of the bellows would work. This way, the planks would rot first before moisture can get to the bellows itself. They are also easily replaceable and probably a lot easier to make than a whole new bellows. So every few months or so, depending on humidity, replace the planks and reset the bellows over the new planks. 20:09 Also, if you want to stabilize the piston portion of the bellows so it doesn't bounce so much, you could install a plank underneath it so it slides along the plank. Wood is pretty springy though, so it might be fine the way you have it. 20:30 You might want to quench the nails once they're done for some extra hardening. After they're formed and cut, reheat them, then drop them into a container with water in it. The rapid cooling of the metal will make it stronger. 22:49 You should probably make some metal tongs as well so you can blacksmith smaller pieces of metal.
He already showed how to get iron, it is slow and hard to get any significant amount. Makes no sense to keep doing it. It's only keep him from do some other project.
@@AntonioArrudaNeto Make no mistake I watched the videos on how he gets iron. The point is that what he teaches that he takes out and is about to hammer is slag, which contains with a lot of luck a percentage of 4% iron. He shows you how to hammer away impurities and in the next video he shows you the tools. in real life the percentage of iron obtained is between 0.4 and 0.8%.
@@szeddezs Yeah, he did do it !! Go to his website, or this channel's video list. There is a 1:15:34hr more comprehensive video on the process. Other videos show additional pieces of the process, including making the charcoal. Plenty of other videos on Y/T show the same exact process. Learn what you are speaking about, before you speak out so emphatically against it !!!
Hello, thank you for your videos! It seems to me that now it is such videos with different mechanisms that are of the greatest interest! Try to make a similar Saw mechanism. Why don't you raise the blacksmith's place higher to stand tall? Thank you again, your videos are incredible!
I always like your video titles, i think it's time for you to change because your work is so amazing it deserves more views
also i know you are not good at english, you have a lot of fans around you, you can ask for help to your beloved audience, that makes sense, thanks for your great video!!!
English translation often loses continuity, but you can see the same in other languages. His meanings are not lost and it gives character to his dialogue.
How did you make all that metal.
@@emmapeel5950 when your a fake UA-camr you can do anything.
Primitive Skills you can run but you can't hide. The guys we're hiring the bikes from know you and the location of your tent. We even have one of your workers willing to give an interview.
So let's do this amicable and arrange a meeting world exclusive interview and a tour of your tent. My email is open 24/7.
@@emmapeel5950 : @Primitive Skills has earlier videos that show the process from start to finish. The making of the charcoal. The collection of the ore. The preparation of the ore. The final Smelting of that ore to extract the iron.
He then has videos showing him make each of the tools he uses.
Don't let the Trolls convince you otherwise.
21:20 This shot of you forging in the rain is literally the culmination of everything that you have been working towards thus far ! I can not wait to see what's next ! Keep up the awesome work man ! Gửi đến bạn nhiều năng lượng tốt để bạn luôn an toàn và khỏe mạnh cho tương lai
And just the pleasure of doing something you enjoy! ❤️
You are by far the most technologically advanced primitive channel. I don't even know if it should be called Primitive.
Спасибо за русские субтитры. Большое спасибо за видео! Оставляю свой комментарий в поддержку канала! Всем добра и мирного неба над головой! Будьте здоровы!
I have long wanted to write about this channel. Express your admiration for this person. Who did not bring here nails building materials, came empty-handed. And everything that is made with his own hands.
Not fan of the title but I must say you earned that title anyway. You’re the Da Vinci of survival 😁
He might be referring to the guy who gave him the idea for the water-powered bellows. Otherwise, wouldn't he have said 'I am a real genius'? If I'm not misinformed, 'that guy' might also have given him ideas for wood gearing as well... We'll see if he puts those into use. With gearing, you can increase speed or torque, so it would be really interesting to see what he does with it.
nah sorry man the da vinci of survival tags always must go to primitive technology
@@Xero1of1 you mean pulley
@@Xero1of1 it might, anyway his gearing mechanism is really pleasing to watch growing ! Really inspiring
I think he has a person that translates his titles and captions.
Трдовые навыки этого человека вызывают бесконечное уважение и восхищение !
❤️❤️
And you started with just a sharp rock and your bare hands, and made everything on camera, fair and square, without any outside help or materials. Not just your extreme capability, but also your determination to keep to your original plan, is amazing and inspiring.
my dude, come back to reality please. at the LEAST he's been purchasing materials. the cement/concrete and the metals.
yea, its clear its not all harvested by hand from scratch, the method is shown how its crafted and then is built with brought in materials. u can tell that after he shaped the shovel / machete, that he had bought pieces of mild steel and then worked from that.. still impressive. he even showed pieces of steel he brought from town to turn into chisel, and the concrete amount is entirely unrealistic to create that vast amount with the method shown ,
YOU HAVE BEEN DECEIVED! This is scamming, this guys looks like lived in Vietnam, probably trespassing forest and illegally ruined it for subs and money.
Fake, big time
The rope he used to tie on his bellows is store bought. I give him credit for being more authentic than so many other ‘primitive’ channels…he does show you the methods, but he did purchase mild steel and he did purchase concrete, if not the majority of the blocks for the pond.
This guy multiple minds! I like it always and I never miss his single episode.
I'm glad to see this forge up and running. You are doing excellent 👏 👌 🙌 👍 😀 😊
I don't care for the haters on the title, when you're a genius you're a genius and my man is at the top of his craft. This was nuts.
ngl. the real genius chad was the people from long ago that discovered these inventions and innovations. he just used them from what he have learned, and improvise a bit.
then again, define genius.
Now, now, humility is the better part of valor!
I'm impressed at how quickly you advance on these projects! I'm also surprised that you've gotten as far as you have without a lathe; not even a basic bow lathe, from what I can see! Perhaps consider making a primitive chuck to attach to the waterwheel's shaft? A lathe can make better drive-shafts for future automation, since the more perfectly round and smooth they are, the less energy they waste on unwanted friction.
Also, a waterwheel-powered drill might be a viable option if you want to bore holes of a standard diameter.
And using the waterwheel to power a potter's wheel would save you a lot of fuss and the pottery would be a lot easier to make. Having to kick the wheel every few seconds is not efficient.
@@susank4878 No the potters wheel does not need to be powered. He needs to make a sitting one that he can kick with his foot. Those wheels are quite easy to make. I went in to some details how to put one together pretty easy. He pretty much has one already just needs to build a frame and a bottom plate for spinning.
A lathe is not truly needed. The really only thing you need a lathe for is maybe for the water wheel and maybe a few carts other than that what doe you need one for. Effort spent could be doing other projects of more value.
@@kameljoe21 He definitely doesn't _need_ a lathe, but it would sure make his life easier!
I would think drill bits forged, or maybe lathe would be neccessary to makes bits.
Great job with automating the bellows it works great, although you might end up using more charcoal if you're making a new tool instead of swapping between bars since the bellows are always running, keep up the good work!
Yeah he might likely use more yet because its running the whole time you can do a half a dozen pieces at a time. This means while working one thing the other are heating up then its all about swapping out and start pounding. This is what a blacksmith helper would have done to keep the fire stoked and stuff ready. You would make dozens of things at once rather than one thing at a time in batches for the whole day. Effective even as a single worker.
It's totally possible that this iron bar for making the nails was originally rebar from a store. That's okay, because your channel is still awesome! I like the content very much.
Likely just round stock of mild steel. Lot of these chunks look like off cuts of bigger steel that might have been salvaged from the junk yard. Either way building a blacksmithing shop and working towards better things is clearly want we all want. Every time he does something its just better. Imagine in 10 years what we will see.
Next on the to do list of projects: 1. Power hammer, 2. Electroplating bath, 3.Spaceflight
The water wheel and blower combo is almost too efficient you're going to need more hammering now🤣
E de novo você consegue impressionar todos com seu talento. Parabéns e continue até chegar na era da energia elétrica
seria foda isso em kkkk
esse cara é um gênio
Hello Brother! You did great! Got some more nails and the blower setup! The place looks so peaceful, thank you for another beautiful video. Have a blessed day!
I've been following you for years now. You truly are gifted with knowledge. I hope that you have continued success, as I try to emulate some of your projects.
Lmao how to emulate it? Well first you need money and a place to buy that shit…
these videos are really great. I am really impressed by all this know-how accumulated over the years! What perseverance and what courage for this solitary work! well done ! I hope to see many more videos! Thank you from the heart !
You nailed this video!
Excelente trabajo !
Saludos amigo !!
I would add a full height stone wall on the back side and the water side of the smithy. This will prevent an earth slide. Also, add a stone floor and a nice stone box for the smithy. You could also include the furnace or oven in this buiding and rebuild it with stone bricks
Fico aguardando ansiosamente os próximos vídeos. São os melhores do UA-cam .
You are very good. Wish you all the best
If you make tongs, you can clamp nails with them and make hats for them by simply hitting a stone with a heated nail a couple of times, due to the fact that they are conical, they will hold well ..
This setup would make refining iron a lot easier, since you would not have to pump air yourself.
❤️❤️❤️
Как всегда ИНТЕРЕСНОЕ ВИДЕО!!!
Кузнечное дело, это КРУТО!!!
МИР ВАШЕМУ ДОМУ 🙏🕊️
Always interesting...wonderful scenery
Thank you ,
🐺
You could build an attic in the new building to store the harvest, tools or others things
I can’t wait to see what comes next, you never ceased to amaze us,
Great job,you deserve the praises.
The best channel on youtube.
First mechanization! Amazing! Waiting for steam powered mechanisms )))
bravooo...
I admire what you have achieved in 5 years, it is incomprehensible to the mind. Not to reproach you, but you can't work sitting in front of the anvil, you'll just get tired, you need your back to be straight, and when you hit the hammer, the elbow should be at an angle of 90 degrees. and then it will be much easier for you!
I wish he could take risk of injury very seriously as somehow he believes injuries are for the ill experienced . I say injuries get you when you least expect and when your confidence level is off the charts. Basic PPE is all we ask even if it's a primitive type. I am as sure he can come up with something.
@@kevinmakelane123 sorry, I didn't say anything about the injury, it was about comfort, it's just not convenient to forge sitting and you get tired quickly!
Parabéns pelo projeto bem sucedido.
That reciprocating engine trick to blow on the fire is awesome. Water wheel uses are endless.
I saw so many survival videos but I do know ur my favourite 💓👊🏻❤️🙌 I watched ur all and still waiting for updates of ur nature palace 😍❤️ love u man 👊🏻💓💓😍
Wow. This guy really listens to everyone's idea. I remember someone's comment about using the waterfall to run an automated furnace blower and he set out and accomplished it. This is what a community is all about
This is so hype, a fully automated bellows in the forge now. The workshop is really looking like something out of Dr Stone
Quite a milestone achieved!
I loved this so much. The whole new Smithy is beautiful. The camera shots from the forge while raining, and as it is getting darker are very lovely. As one smith to another. May I suggest that you make a valve in the pipe from the bellows to the forge to restrict the airflow if you need to reduce the heat of the forge. also will you still have enough elbow room to work at the grinding wheel? Looks a bit tight now. but that may just be the camera angle. Always love watching the progress and ingenuity of your little farm. Have a great week.
Hi Patrick, bom dia.
Amo seus vídeos desde os primeiros. E agora estão ainda melhores. Você usando a criatividade para poupar o esfôrço humano. Sei que é capaz de transformar a energia hidráulica em força e luz. Parabéns 👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽
A Brasileira 🇧🇷
Maravilha! Mais 4 anos e esta propriedade estará totalmente automatizada.😀😀👍
Concordo kkkkkk
Nice my friend , you are making life better
I'm not a fan of the title of this video, I prefer the truthful and honest titles
Bom dia fico feliz com seus vídeos adoro.
mastering the energy of water gravity flow, good job !
Хорошо мне понравилось успехов вам
Truly Genius and first on theUA-cam.
Wow, what a great and amazing video, it was interesting and educating. The mistake most people make is waiting till it is too late before investing. This is the time and season when bold steps are to be taken, wealth begins in the mind.
I love the fact you stressed on the words grabbing opportunities. But how will one know what to focus on, last year I invested into gold and got nothing meaningful
Not really, I also did that and got nothing till I got to know of crypto coin trading. I have made a raw profit of $350k since November last year.
@@sophiablakes Actually, I'm an amateur investor. so please can you help me out here?
I'm not exactly good at this, I just work with Mrs Laurel Jane Morgan, she helps me out with the analysis and trading
@@sophiablakes Please excuse me, does your money stay in your possession, I would like to know more, how does it work?
WINDMILL WINDMILL, LOVE YOUR VIDEOS! PARADISE!
Rapaz, você é um gênio.
I vote for a water wheel powered fan above the bed next.
Ce que j’aime dans ses vidéos il produit tout il achète rien dans les magasins en fait tout est naturel bravo
This is super awesome. I've always been facinated by 'simple' machinery and this chanel has been amazing.
Also, I love your scenery shots. Watching that storm roll in was very cool.
You should make an opening on your pipe, so that you can stop the air flow to your fire because having à continuous air flow to your fire will multiply by 2 or 3 the amount of charcoal you will use!!!
Great vid and forging!!
He could also pivot the pipe away from the fire. Or, stop the waterwheel.
There are many solutions, just pointing out a possible issue
Nice video ❤️❤️
If you start doing clickbait titles, and Photoshop on the thimbnail, I'm unsubbing. That's what makes your channel stand out. Being genuine.
So cooooooooool!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Not a fan of the title. It makes it look like clickbait... Which then introduces the thought process that your primitive videos are fake like the other primitive channels, which I know isnt true because Ive spent years watching you, but to a new watcher, they will think its fake.
I also love solitude with nature! 👍Mentally and morally relaxing. Great video, thank you! Good luck and prosperity to you, greetings from Russia🇷🇺.
man it makes you wanna shout "i am a legend!" you have such a great amount of stuff to use
Молодец, одно удовольствие следить за твоей работой.
항상 동영상이 올라오길 기다리고 기대합니다. 영상 업로드해주셔서 감사합니다. Im all ways waiting for vedio, and thanks you for vedio upload 👍
Good morning blessing 🌄
Your water wheel will soon rot, destroying hundreds of hours of your labor. You should make a water bypass so the wheel will remain dry when not in use.
Excelente trabajo.
Este invento, se materializó, fué un comentario que hice al respecto, de utlilizar para el fuelles, convertir un movimiento circular, en otro alternativo.
Genial ejecución.
Este video, vale 100 likes.
Congratulations.
Truly incredible work!!!
Good job 👌....but I am still waiting to you make a lathe machine or sawmill
The problem is that with the bellows running constantly, you're going to consume fuel way too rapidly.
True, he needs some pulley/lever system so he can engage or disengage the main water pipe to the water wheel from within the smithy.
It won't be easy but I'd live to see Jim build it.
@@macieksmolarz5274 Nah, all he really needs to do is attach a long stick to the water pipe to slide it in or out of place. And who's Jim?
@@szeddezs it's easier, just redirect the compressed air away
@@szeddezs wouldn't it be easier to cover the air hole and it should have been him not Jim. Also you forgot about Joe.
Всем привет!
Чувак, восхищаюсь тобой! Ты красавчик! Не могу понять, почему ты птицу не разводишь? Ведь она частенько за кадром кукарекает.
❤️❤️❤️
Malaysia come's..u are terbaikkk bosss
Pls don't go into the category of try hards with those titles.
Agreed brother
As long as the content stays the same, who really cares?
@@szeddezs what content nothing new to see here.
@@fletchrommys7766 what?
@@fletchrommys7766 Well it isn't reused footage or a constant stream of bullshit so I don't understand what it is you're referring to.
aawee yeeeeeees
A suggestion for you to utilize your water wheel's rotational speed. Perhaps you could use it to create a more rapid water hammer by placing a gear teeth on the water wheel's outer rim. Then connect the gears to a levered hammer and you would have a water powered hammer. It would help raise your production efficiency as you no longer have to swing the hammer yourself and you can focus on crafting the tools you forge.
All vedio nice 👌🏻👌🏻👌🏻
Even more impressive is making that iron bar.
You should really find some way to make linseed oil or wax or something similar to coat those nails to make them last MUCH longer before rusting
Hóy día,es lo mejor que se puede ver tanto en el móvil como en la tele con diferencia es instructivo 100%...entretenido. Aparte eres un manitas en todo y...la gran capacidad de crear todo típo de herramientas y comodidades como utensilios cada vez mejor...buscar todo típo de metales-alimentos-caza-siembra ect. Felicidades una vez mas. CHAPÓO.
10:33 Hmm. For longevity of the bellows, you probably want to put a barrier of some kind between the clay and the wood... Concrete would be good too, but you'd still want a barrier between the concrete and the bellows. You need to keep it as dry as possible, so maybe creating a base out of concrete, then forming some planks of wood to conform to the shape of the bellows would work. This way, the planks would rot first before moisture can get to the bellows itself. They are also easily replaceable and probably a lot easier to make than a whole new bellows. So every few months or so, depending on humidity, replace the planks and reset the bellows over the new planks.
20:09 Also, if you want to stabilize the piston portion of the bellows so it doesn't bounce so much, you could install a plank underneath it so it slides along the plank. Wood is pretty springy though, so it might be fine the way you have it.
20:30 You might want to quench the nails once they're done for some extra hardening. After they're formed and cut, reheat them, then drop them into a container with water in it. The rapid cooling of the metal will make it stronger.
22:49 You should probably make some metal tongs as well so you can blacksmith smaller pieces of metal.
He has got tongues, the first few ironwork tools he made were tongues which was a brilliant video and a game changer for his survival.
A nail header would be good tool for the nail process.
wow. Thanks
I love the new titles
Another great project i salute for your new video i love it
I love your videos. They help me sleep.
This guy is a genius, he even makes it look like he mines the iron himself when he actually buys it.
He already showed how to get iron, it is slow and hard to get any significant amount. Makes no sense to keep doing it. It's only keep him from do some other project.
Can you give a time code where he made it look like he mined the iron himself?
Spoiler alert: you can't, because he didn't.
@@AntonioArrudaNeto Make no mistake I watched the videos on how he gets iron. The point is that what he teaches that he takes out and is about to hammer is slag, which contains with a lot of luck a percentage of 4% iron. He shows you how to hammer away impurities and in the next video he shows you the tools. in real life the percentage of iron obtained is between 0.4 and 0.8%.
@@AntonioArrudaNeto Not to mention that iron bar that was supposedly saved for future projects shows no sign of rust.
@@szeddezs Yeah, he did do it !! Go to his website, or this channel's video list. There is a 1:15:34hr more comprehensive video on the process. Other videos show additional pieces of the process, including making the charcoal.
Plenty of other videos on Y/T show the same exact process.
Learn what you are speaking about, before you speak out so emphatically against it !!!
very expensive knowledge but obtained for free through this video, you are a teacher with a million knowledge... greetings from Indonesia 🇲🇨
Like this nice thanks for share and good video thanks 👍❤️
love how sarcastic the title sounds...
Looks like the titles to those vids are made by his loving mother, so sweet if you think about it
AWESOME !!!!!!!
Imagine what this guy could build with modern tools and electricity.
This is technology ;-). Your determination always impress me. It is inspiring.
👏👏Nice progress👍👍😉🤞🤞
Hello, thank you for your videos! It seems to me that now it is such videos with different mechanisms that are of the greatest interest! Try to make a similar Saw mechanism. Why don't you raise the blacksmith's place higher to stand tall? Thank you again, your videos are incredible!
Dude you gotta make a gear system made out of clay that does something that would be awesome
You won't believe what happens next!
Stunning. Fabulous. Unreal. No click bait going on here at all. ;)
Ban cũng có thể chế quạt voi chuyển động của bánh quay nước rất mát cho mùa hè