@@williammakepeace36 most people here don't care. He has demonstrated that he knows the process. What we don't want is for an interesting channel like this to fall into the repetition and boredom of one video after another of the same. There are many things to experience and learn. If you are interested in hammers there are other channels.
@@valpage8221 i think that your daughter should give the eagle its eyes because she don't know how to use them. as i recall, there are only about 3 videos at the very start of the channel with an older man which he later identify as his grandfather who teach him most of these skills. his very first 2 videos of himself was that of him trying to build a hut in the rain, which failed miserably. as a matter of fact, most of his earlier videos were filmed by a cave. at that time, he was the only primitive channel that wasn't building a hut, and i absolutely hated him for it. then he came down, occupy a nice piece of land, build a livable hut and plant rice. the guy had came from where he couldn't put a few sticks together to make a shelter to making axes and hammers. he has been living a life that most of us dreamed of, even he cut a few corners. i don't see what some of you deal is. maybe you are sorry for your life.
@@c0nstantin86 they are flat enough to make what he is doing at this point. to make an anvil he will need much more iron and a much bigger forge and much more
If he could find sulphur and potassium nitrate, then it would definitely be possible. If he could drill out the bore and make the lock mechanism then he'd be into the 1600s.
He could make something like a pipe flintlock realistically enough. Depending on the availability of certain chemicals like sulfur and nitre and such, he could theoretically mix some gunpowder and make a toploaded rifle firing stone pellets. Might be against local laws, though.
Actually potassium nitrate is the only required ingredient of those two, and it can be extracted from barnyard waste without mining. However, the firearm he'd have to make would need to be a match lock.
What I love most about his series is seeing his growth in utilizing his skill set... His creative ideas for the things he needs to get the job done! And of course the clips of the snails, which says alot with no need for words... Example, slow and steady wins the race, it may not be fast and or doesn't provide instant results, however the results from having to do it yourself using only what you build yourself creates a satisfaction and respect that only comes from completely imersing yourself with dedication and deligance and self control. Which is Priceless in my opinion! ♡♡♡ Thanks for sharring this amazing journey... ♡♡♡
You’re doing a great job on the forging videos you’ve come a long way from your first failures over a year ago. You’ve really expanded your knowledge base.
Awesome job ! ❤👍 Suggestion: instead of using a boulder for an anvil, you could forge weld together several homemade steel ingots into something called a Viking-style post anvil, which has a spike on the bottom you can hammer into a tree stump or an upended log. Makes sense to upgrade your anvil the same way you upgraded your hammer, and a steel anvil should provide much better work efficiency. Heck, if you make a stone cutter's chisel-drill, you could even put a hole in the center of that boulder (or better still a taller one at a more optimal working height) and slip the post anvil directly into it. That would add even more rebound efficiency by taking the wood out of the equation ... enough to be on par with a modern forged anvil I think. 😎
idk man, i don’t think that a steam powered bamboo spaceship will work on its own. maybe with a doll who controlls a potato powered super computer from the ground might help a little bit :P
You joke but this does show the necessary steps in evolution that it takes to get to ever more impressive feats of technology. The way he made his bellows was surprisingly inventive and innovative. With all this he can build even better tools for forging.
Hope a hard rain doesn’t wash him away. His edutainment is awesome. I’m impressed with the quality and lack of inclusions in his steel. Good heat, good iron ore, good skills and knowledge. Keep going Padawan.
THIS. OMG THIS SO MUCH. I've been asking channels for YEARS to take what they have, and remake their tools, better! Seeing you make your axe several times, and now, you've got this well made iron axe, it's...damned near modern blacksmithing. this makes me SO happy.
I love your attitude in the subtitles! You're so positive about your strengths and that if you keep working and keep trying - that you will get through anything! Very inspiring as always~
If you pay attention, you can see he hits faster when there's some sort of close milestone, like breaking through for the hole, or forming the edge. He gets excited that he's almost finished 😁
When starting the hole you take your time inbetween each hit to make sure you're nicely centered. Once the hole is started you can start banging faster as the chisel will slip in there correctly by itsself.
Watching your videos fills my heart with such joy. Your story is interesting, smartly executed, comprehensive and *FUN!* Accomplishing a long term lifestyle that leads to ongoing success is such an incredible achievement. Letting us follow along on your journey, priceless! Thank you so much for that! 🙏🙏🙏🌸💖🌸🙏🙏🙏
Nice to see you listened to us on your last video and kept the metal nice and hot to limit cracks from cold forging. The axe is very impressive for such a primitive forge. And as others have said, driving a slim wedge of metal or hardwood into the top of a tool's handle will help keep the tool head on a lot better. (If you're using a wood wedge, at the very least, start a groove where you're going to be driving it on to help it penetrate the handle.)
One other thing, using green wood for a tool with a socket is okay in the short term, but as the wood dries, it'll shrink resulting in a loose fit. Always used the driest hardwood you can for handles to limit that.
How did you acquire so many skills? You look pretty young, but you know a lot about many types of construction, farming, and tool making. You are clearly an accomplished blacksmith and make it look easy.
It might seem strange but getting the basic in a desent amount of skills is not that hard an the experience from the skills themselves carrie over to the others.
I took a week of blacksmithing classes, after that the same shop I learned at did open blacksmithing nights twice a week. I made a bearded axe head on the 3rd or 4th week. Shaping the metal isn't hard at all. The hard shit is like forge welding, I've still only successfully forge welded a handful of times all together. (edit) I knew a guy that had been doing it for 6 months and he was making pattern welded billets. So, yeah.
Ohhh he's gonna cut a tree again and there's gonna be a big drama around here. And then he's gonna build a house, a boat, a desk, some chairs, etc. and everyone's gonna relax again. This dude I swear, what a dude!
The quality of you new iron age tools is so good I thought you brought them from a store. Great Job! Found iron in dirt and you turned it into something awesome!
You definitely want to put the head a bit lower on the shaft seeing you are pushing shavings down when putting it on. That shows its a bit too tight. And put in a wedge, that makes it infinitely more secure, especially since its green wood you are using which will shrink quite a bit still. Very important for safety, especially with an axe but also the hammer.
Just a man, alone. In the forest, making things most people wouldn't have a CLUE how to craft. When my faith in humanity is at it's lowest, I watch these videos to remind myself that there are people out there who WILL keep humanity alive. Bravo man, keep it up!
I look forward to your videos all the time! Love watching your progression through each project you do and honestly, I wish I could do what you do! All of this is amazing to watch and great to learn from. I also just found out that you have subtitles explaining things so I'm gonna go through each video and rewatch again! :D Have a great day!
I sometimes feel like he buys the iron. But even if it does buy the iron, it changes nothing. He made all this metal stuff primitively. Im sure he made it himself, but in the off chance, its still 110% badass
this is the first time i found myself questioning the validity of these videos. That iron bar he pulls out of the fire is a bit square and sharp. seems like it was poured or cut rather than hammered out.
@@CakeProDuckShins I understand that however, I watch these videos with the illusion that someone is actually living this way. We see videos of smelting ore into metal and weapons/tools being created. The clearly machined billet/bar of metal blows the illusion for me. Even if he had stated something like, "i traded 2 kilo rice for this bar of metal" it would have kept the illusion for me. I am a big fan, watched all the videos. I just want to believe that the videos are real, it's hard for me to do so when i see stuff like that.
Очень качественное железо получилось по первобытной технологии... Ни капли лишнего шлака во время ковки нет, прямо как высший сорт современной заводской отливки!
OMG you had a crazy evolution. The next step is make a iron drills, and go on! Also, you can use the actuatic force of the river to do something cool! Great work dude! keep working!
I enjoy to watch what ur doing in the jungle. Yup it takes perseverance to do what ur doing and it's a great way to calm ones souls in the woods alone. I would definitely enjoy to play in the streams n catch those fish all day long 👍🏽
Dude, you have much love from me.. heck I'm even going to like the video outright two mins in, but don't tell me that you hand forged those iron billets.. I know enough about forging to say that I'm going to believe it when i see it. edit: don't get me wrong, you're a very hard worker, probably better person then I am, i love your videos and i'm keeping track of your channel before you made drainage tunnel but still.. make a video going to ironshop with your dad or uncle, we're still going to love you, you won't lose subscribers because of honesty, just gain more. Cheers from Croatia!
Yeah... I dont buy it either. He is a hard worker, but... Have to make all that charcoal, collect all that ore, build and rebuild the furnace, process all the material before... and after. Humans did this in groups for a reason... he is not being 100% honest.
@@bsod4144 nije nemoguće, ali malo vjerojatno. jako malo vjerojatno.. da je sam one željezne poluge proizveo od rude koju je sakupio (od prvog videa), dan danas još ne bi bio gotov. Plus, po čistoći se vidi da nije to to..
Love your channel, I watch only you and primitive technology for a reason! As for the material you started out with, it doesn’t seem like that came from the ground you’re standing on. BUT bear grylls isn’t honest about everything either. It’s entertainment after all and you’re doing a good job!
I watch your videos, especially thinking of the valved double-throw blower... and I watch other archeology shows. I wonder if stone age, bronze age, iron age man had the capacity to come up with such complex ideas. But they were EXACTLY as smart as any of us today. Just hadn't discovered as much yet. It's really fascinating. I wish I could go back in time and see it for reals.
I find it suprising that you always have that much iron at your disposal. It looks like you are buying it from a store. You should improve the handles of your tool,espacially the hammer that you use so often.
@@KuopioKallavesi Like Ted said "he already showed how to make one". He can buy them if he wants instead of wasting weeks searching for and smelting ore. Comments like yours make me laugh. Only an idiot would spend all of his energy on something he can obtain through easier methods.
I really appreciate the variety of your videos!! I enjoy when you show us different edible plants!!! I would love to see you forge some hooks and then take them and use them for fishing! Have you considered integrating prawns into your pond? A breeding area for crabs would be interesting to watch as well. Thank you for all of your effort in making great videos!!
Andrey Mamoika honestly, even if they arent made by him, hes already shown he can do it once and lets be honest, he isn’t actually doing this to survive, but as entertainment.
He should have the whole tribe behind him to dug all that ore, to burn all that coal to make those ingots 🤔 But there is no tribe shown in these videos, so it's absolutely normal for him to show us once how to make such an ingot from raw ore, and then just use bought ingots to advance further 😉
very nice work! I must do one too, you should at the level of the handle put an insert in the center of the wood to spread the handle in the ax head this will allow you to have an additional solidity! nothing to say very good job for the ax head! see you soon
i love this channel, been watching since the first video, very cool to watch all the things you build/make, was very exciting when you first started to experiment with iron, and to now have mastered it!
This is definitely steel, you can see the hardness of the metal, and it does hold an edge. Medium to low carbon grade steel I'd guess. I liked the other video where he made those tongs he was using a piece of bamboo prior to that.
We don’t see any folding/welding operations almost always necessary with bloomery steel especially when forging tools you need to clean it or the material will fall appart due to the sponginess of the bloom itself. May be he did all this off camera ?
well, in earlier videos he has proven that he is able to make iron. If he now cuts some corners after the fact, I think that's ok. I don't want to watch him make iron ingots for the next 2 years...
The downside of using green wood like this is that it will shrink when it dries out making the tight fit useless pretty soon. You could use a method chair makers do, put one end of the wood stick into hot sand drying it out extremely well above normal humidity, then make it a tight fight for the axe. Then when you intruduce the wood to the humid air again the wood will expand slightly and make the fit even more tight. (the upside is it requires no glue and little effort.) This way you can make sure the axe won't come flying off. Also to further increase the safety put a wedge in like Aethelwyrn said.
@@MoRockHound he skipped quite a lot of the process in the bloom to bar video. But that doesn't negate his awesome work in his videos, humanity took thousands of years to be able to work iron properly, and it was a combined effort, there were people gathering wood, others making charcoal and so on. A single guy would never be able to do it by himself back then, those corners need to be cut in order for this kind of videos to be made, or it would take him an absurd amount of time just to be able to produce a single bar, which would be boring as hell.
If we only had bamboo in the colder climes, civilization would have advanced much more rapidly. That stuff is so versatile, used in everything. I also like his bellows. It explains why a metal Smith was so valuable, to make those iron tools he sure went through alot to make them. I have to have respect for the effort.
I think investing the time to make a small anvil might be a good idea, forge a spike out of the lower section and drive it into a large and heavy log. Maybe some sturdier tongs too, now that you are really getting the experience of this blacksmithing
Now this Asian Primitive Technology Guy is the best. Taught us how to make iron. Blacksmith tools. Now his recent tool is an axe. I cannot wait for the future what his project will be. Make an rifle? Lol Just kidding. I actually like his videos than other Asian Primitive Technology Channels because they're clickbaits. I learn nothing from them and they're not entertaining. This guy is very knowledgeable and entertaining. Keep making more videos.
Watch the previous videos. He already unlocked the achievent of processing iron ore. Now he can use his UA-cam money to buy iron blanks from a local market.
Watch the iron hammer upgrade video here: bit.ly/2VINUQz
@@williammakepeace36 most people here don't care. He has demonstrated that he knows the process. What we don't want is for an interesting channel like this to fall into the repetition and boredom of one video after another of the same. There are many things to experience and learn.
If you are interested in hammers there are other channels.
👍👍👍👍
I think a new house is coming? (((-;
make an emery by stranding a stone with a crank or water
@@valpage8221 i think that your daughter should give the eagle its eyes because she don't know how to use them. as i recall, there are only about 3 videos at the very start of the channel with an older man which he later identify as his grandfather who teach him most of these skills. his very first 2 videos of himself was that of him trying to build a hut in the rain, which failed miserably. as a matter of fact, most of his earlier videos were filmed by a cave. at that time, he was the only primitive channel that wasn't building a hut, and i absolutely hated him for it. then he came down, occupy a nice piece of land, build a livable hut and plant rice. the guy had came from where he couldn't put a few sticks together to make a shelter to making axes and hammers. he has been living a life that most of us dreamed of, even he cut a few corners. i don't see what some of you deal is. maybe you are sorry for your life.
Time to make a foot operated grinding stone
Surely a job for monjolo
he's got water and bamboo, why make it foot powered when you can have it water powered :D
I thought the same exact thing.
And an anvil! Those stones are not flat enough
@@c0nstantin86 they are flat enough to make what he is doing at this point. to make an anvil he will need much more iron and a much bigger forge and much more
Video in a year: “Making my musket rifle for hunting”
At least this is actually a fairly realistic goal
If he could find sulphur and potassium nitrate, then it would definitely be possible. If he could drill out the bore and make the lock mechanism then he'd be into the 1600s.
Musket ehh maybe a bit optimistic he'd be more likely to make a sort of black powder hand cannon
He could make something like a pipe flintlock realistically enough. Depending on the availability of certain chemicals like sulfur and nitre and such, he could theoretically mix some gunpowder and make a toploaded rifle firing stone pellets.
Might be against local laws, though.
Actually potassium nitrate is the only required ingredient of those two, and it can be extracted from barnyard waste without mining. However, the firearm he'd have to make would need to be a match lock.
What I love most about his series is seeing his growth in utilizing his skill set...
His creative ideas for the things he needs to get the job done!
And of course the clips of the snails, which says alot with no need for words...
Example, slow and steady wins the race, it may not be fast and or doesn't provide instant results, however the results from having to do it yourself using only what you build yourself creates a satisfaction and respect that only comes from completely imersing yourself with dedication and deligance and self control. Which is Priceless in my opinion!
♡♡♡
Thanks for sharring this amazing journey...
♡♡♡
You’re doing a great job on the forging videos you’ve come a long way from your first failures over a year ago. You’ve really expanded your knowledge base.
I've been here since the beginning and following its evolution has been a wonderful thing. Brazil te assiste!
Eu também! Gosto muito
Dá uma tranquilidade
É da hora
Eu
Kkkkk (all I know in portuguese)
Awesome job ! ❤👍
Suggestion: instead of using a boulder for an anvil, you could forge weld together several homemade steel ingots into something called a Viking-style post anvil, which has a spike on the bottom you can hammer into a tree stump or an upended log. Makes sense to upgrade your anvil the same way you upgraded your hammer, and a steel anvil should provide much better work efficiency. Heck, if you make a stone cutter's chisel-drill, you could even put a hole in the center of that boulder (or better still a taller one at a more optimal working height) and slip the post anvil directly into it. That would add even more rebound efficiency by taking the wood out of the equation ... enough to be on par with a modern forged anvil I think. 😎
In two years he will have a steam engine and in five fly into space, with a bamboo rocket
Idiot comment of you..🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Bamboonium rocket....
idk man, i don’t think that a steam powered bamboo spaceship will work on its own. maybe with a doll who controlls a potato powered super computer from the ground might help a little bit :P
You joke but this does show the necessary steps in evolution that it takes to get to ever more impressive feats of technology. The way he made his bellows was surprisingly inventive and innovative. With all this he can build even better tools for forging.
Dude
My dad aways says he will build a bamboo rocket lmao
Hope a hard rain doesn’t wash him away. His edutainment is awesome. I’m impressed with the quality and lack of inclusions in his steel. Good heat, good iron ore, good skills and knowledge. Keep going Padawan.
Это не сталь.
THIS.
OMG THIS SO MUCH. I've been asking channels for YEARS to take what they have, and remake their tools, better! Seeing you make your axe several times, and now, you've got this well made iron axe, it's...damned near modern blacksmithing. this makes me SO happy.
Next step. Steel
❤❤
Just watched this dude hot punch an iron bar with primitive tools he made himself and forge an ax. What a legend.
I think it looks fun, but that looks like a good 3-4 week process before you can even start to make the first ingot.
I love your attitude in the subtitles! You're so positive about your strengths and that if you keep working and keep trying - that you will get through anything! Very inspiring as always~
21:16 that was a dangerous slip there bud
LOL
Self neutering
Damn lol
Haha
You can`t forge one of those...
If you pay attention, you can see he hits faster when there's some sort of close milestone, like breaking through for the hole, or forming the edge. He gets excited that he's almost finished 😁
When starting the hole you take your time inbetween each hit to make sure you're nicely centered.
Once the hole is started you can start banging faster as the chisel will slip in there correctly by itsself.
@@tijlaerts lmao
@@tijlaerts Sounds oddly familiar... depends on the size, width, and integrity of the "hole" 😼😼😏😏
Watching your videos fills my heart with such joy. Your story is interesting, smartly executed, comprehensive and *FUN!* Accomplishing a long term lifestyle that leads to ongoing success is such an incredible achievement. Letting us follow along on your journey, priceless! Thank you so much for that!
🙏🙏🙏🌸💖🌸🙏🙏🙏
Never knew this man was so motivational until i turned on captions
Nice to see you listened to us on your last video and kept the metal nice and hot to limit cracks from cold forging. The axe is very impressive for such a primitive forge.
And as others have said, driving a slim wedge of metal or hardwood into the top of a tool's handle will help keep the tool head on a lot better. (If you're using a wood wedge, at the very least, start a groove where you're going to be driving it on to help it penetrate the handle.)
One other thing, using green wood for a tool with a socket is okay in the short term, but as the wood dries, it'll shrink resulting in a loose fit. Always used the driest hardwood you can for handles to limit that.
Wonder when he'll end up making a firearm at this pace haha.
@@fl4k_40 Also it'd be pretty dangerous to use probably...
na verdade dava pra ele fazer uma BESTA
Vietnamese rice farmer making homemade weapons... *Fortunate Son intensifies*
@keith moore Vietnam, i learned has some of the most illegal firearm shops in the world. they make them in a shed with primitive tools.
You could possibly make you a Flintlock. he has metal he has wood.
you have taken the #1 place in my heart for primitive videos
I didn't think that a simple big stone would work that well as an anvil - I am amazed. Great job, great video, thank you very much.
I love how you're so skilled you have to show every step, otherwise annoying people won't believe you did it 😂
How did you acquire so many skills? You look pretty young, but you know a lot about many types of construction, farming, and tool making. You are clearly an accomplished blacksmith and make it look easy.
It might seem strange but getting the basic in a desent amount of skills is not that hard an the experience from the skills themselves carrie over to the others.
I took a week of blacksmithing classes, after that the same shop I learned at did open blacksmithing nights twice a week. I made a bearded axe head on the 3rd or 4th week. Shaping the metal isn't hard at all. The hard shit is like forge welding, I've still only successfully forge welded a handful of times all together.
(edit) I knew a guy that had been doing it for 6 months and he was making pattern welded billets. So, yeah.
I wonder if he can read
@@damon2772nomad Ну.. Если на цифровую камеру снимает, то, наверное, умеет??
its pretty much hardwork and it requires you to have interest in many things, without interest then even if youre hardworking its not gonna workout
Ohhh he's gonna cut a tree again and there's gonna be a big drama around here. And then he's gonna build a house, a boat, a desk, some chairs, etc. and everyone's gonna relax again.
This dude I swear, what a dude!
When you put it in water for a day or so the wood will soak with water, and the connection will hold better.
I don't think that's a practice you'd want to use being out there surviving
Gregory Owen why not. It makes it more secure and holds the axe. Shouldn’t you want the axe to be attached well
using water is only a temporary thing, and also isn't very good for the axe head itself
Or somethin less difficult, a wooden wedge. It works better.
@@credinzel6996 totally agree
The quality of you new iron age tools is so good I thought you brought them from a store. Great Job! Found iron in dirt and you turned it into something awesome!
I’ve been a blacksmith for about a year, with proper tools, and still can hardly make something like your axe!
I think he’s been practicing for a long time
So your not a good blacksmith then? Perhaps a change in career www.indeed.co.uk
@@chrislee8126 just a hobby bro, chillax. Also the fact that you think I’m European is more insulting then the comment
You definitely want to put the head a bit lower on the shaft seeing you are pushing shavings down when putting it on. That shows its a bit too tight. And put in a wedge, that makes it infinitely more secure, especially since its green wood you are using which will shrink quite a bit still. Very important for safety, especially with an axe but also the hammer.
You should try to build a spinning grindstone for your new tools
Big support, make it driven by foot
Just a man, alone. In the forest, making things most people wouldn't have a CLUE how to craft. When my faith in humanity is at it's lowest, I watch these videos to remind myself that there are people out there who WILL keep humanity alive. Bravo man, keep it up!
I am loving this (series) since the first episode, you're amazing at what you do :)
Hi, great work on this axe man! As a hobbyist blacksmith I can appreciate all the skills needed in this process.
Thanks for sharing !!
I look forward to your videos all the time! Love watching your progression through each project you do and honestly, I wish I could do what you do! All of this is amazing to watch and great to learn from. I also just found out that you have subtitles explaining things so I'm gonna go through each video and rewatch again! :D Have a great day!
I’ve watched every video since the beginning to now and just learned this from reading your comment 🙃
Thank you for making this comment I did not know about the subtitle thing now I can actually understand what they are doing
It’s like I’m watching him lvl up in a video game every video I watch from him 😂❤️
Mad respect, I can't wait for the day I build my own forge.
The man with the best skill, I like videos like that.
I love how this is not fake! Other channels dont do it for real. Thank you for good content!!!
I can't believe you made such a stone wall all by yourself... Amazing work with the axe!
Remember to turn captions on!
damn, now iv got to watch it again
James I only realised there were captions in the previous video, so I had to watch that one again as well
@@Dog-eg8lc haha oh god you just keep making more work for me dont you.... good dog
Thought this was a joke until after a few minutes some words popped up out of nowhere 😂
Holy crap... I’ve got to watch everything again now...
We are quite literally forging history right now
I sometimes feel like he buys the iron. But even if it does buy the iron, it changes nothing. He made all this metal stuff primitively. Im sure he made it himself, but in the off chance, its still 110% badass
this is the first time i found myself questioning the validity of these videos. That iron bar he pulls out of the fire is a bit square and sharp. seems like it was poured or cut rather than hammered out.
@@charlescostain8066 This video doesn't say he forged the bar. How does that make it invalid? He has already shown how to make a bar.
@@CakeProDuckShins I understand that however, I watch these videos with the illusion that someone is actually living this way. We see videos of smelting ore into metal and weapons/tools being created. The clearly machined billet/bar of metal blows the illusion for me. Even if he had stated something like, "i traded 2 kilo rice for this bar of metal" it would have kept the illusion for me. I am a big fan, watched all the videos. I just want to believe that the videos are real, it's hard for me to do so when i see stuff like that.
Absolutely right!
First thing I noticed was the ton of coal he bought, no idea if he showed how to mine for coal in a previous video.
Now it's the time to assert your dominance over your bronze wielding rivals
Oh no
late bronze age part 2
I can't wait to see you harvest the crops!!
Eventually he's probably going to have terraces everywhere loaded.
Очень качественное железо получилось по первобытной технологии... Ни капли лишнего шлака во время ковки нет, прямо как высший сорт современной заводской отливки!
This guy and Grandpa Amu should collaborate. Good skills are being learned by the audience and the"host". And all skills are good skills.
Great job! Looks better than those sold in the store.
OMG you had a crazy evolution. The next step is make a iron drills, and go on! Also, you can use the actuatic force of the river to do something cool! Great work dude! keep working!
I enjoy to watch what ur doing in the jungle. Yup it takes perseverance to do what ur doing and it's a great way to calm ones souls in the woods alone.
I would definitely enjoy to play in the streams n catch those fish all day long 👍🏽
Truly amazing how far you have come. Keep grinding and building my guy!
Very good ax and tool. Congratulations and good job, my friend!! 👍👍👍
So impressed, well done!!!
Great job my friend I love to watch you work 👍🏾👏🏾💪🏾
Dude, you have much love from me.. heck I'm even going to like the video outright two mins in, but don't tell me that you hand forged those iron billets.. I know enough about forging to say that I'm going to believe it when i see it.
edit: don't get me wrong, you're a very hard worker, probably better person then I am, i love your videos and i'm keeping track of your channel before you made drainage tunnel but still.. make a video going to ironshop with your dad or uncle, we're still going to love you, you won't lose subscribers because of honesty, just gain more. Cheers from Croatia!
ya he did
nista nemoguce .. ima jako zeljezom bogatu rudu..
Yeah... I dont buy it either. He is a hard worker, but...
Have to make all that charcoal,
collect all that ore,
build and rebuild the furnace,
process all the material before... and after.
Humans did this in groups for a reason... he is not being 100% honest.
@@bsod4144 nije nemoguće, ali malo vjerojatno. jako malo vjerojatno.. da je sam one željezne poluge proizveo od rude koju je sakupio (od prvog videa), dan danas još ne bi bio gotov. Plus, po čistoći se vidi da nije to to..
@@bryphi77 Content - it's All about content ( and Views, and Likes, and Subs) right?
I’m loving your videos!!! Good work! I love your metalworking videos! ⚒💪🏻
Love your channel, I watch only you and primitive technology for a reason! As for the material you started out with, it doesn’t seem like that came from the ground you’re standing on. BUT bear grylls isn’t honest about everything either. It’s entertainment after all and you’re doing a good job!
He could have got it from the ground because you see a cave in a video
he's made videos about how he finds and smelts from raw iron he finds in rocks
Excelente video igual que TODOS los anteriores. Muy inspirador
Wait, did I miss the episode where he fixes his hammer?
That axe is better than a store bought one for many excellent reasons.
Perhaps you will build a mansion 😉😉
a month later ... Look like he's doing it.
I watch your videos, especially thinking of the valved double-throw blower... and I watch other archeology shows. I wonder if stone age, bronze age, iron age man had the capacity to come up with such complex ideas.
But they were EXACTLY as smart as any of us today. Just hadn't discovered as much yet. It's really fascinating. I wish I could go back in time and see it for reals.
I find it suprising that you always have that much iron at your disposal. It looks like you are buying it from a store. You should improve the handles of your tool,espacially the hammer that you use so often.
I think he just buy iron but it’s ok that way he can craft more tools
He's proven that he can make iron from mineral... Take a chill pill bro
@Ted Melchior Err no. he doesnt make the ingots, he buys them obviously. If u knew anything about smelting/forging/etc it would be obvious immediatly.
@@KuopioKallavesi Like Ted said "he already showed how to make one". He can buy them if he wants instead of wasting weeks searching for and smelting ore. Comments like yours make me laugh. Only an idiot would spend all of his energy on something he can obtain through easier methods.
I really appreciate the variety of your videos!!
I enjoy when you show us different edible plants!!!
I would love to see you forge some hooks and then take them and use them for fishing!
Have you considered integrating prawns into your pond?
A breeding area for crabs would be interesting to watch as well.
Thank you for all of your effort in making great videos!!
This new iron pieces are lookin to perfect..
Andrey Mamoika honestly, even if they arent made by him, hes already shown he can do it once and lets be honest, he isn’t actually doing this to survive, but as entertainment.
He should have the whole tribe behind him to dug all that ore, to burn all that coal to make those ingots 🤔
But there is no tribe shown in these videos, so it's absolutely normal for him to show us once how to make such an ingot from raw ore, and then just use bought ingots to advance further 😉
Perfectly angled like 90 degree rectangle shaped
very nice work! I must do one too, you should at the level of the handle put an insert in the center of the wood to spread the handle in the ax head this will allow you to have an additional solidity! nothing to say very good job for the ax head! see you soon
Parabéns o machado ficou ótimo👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼🇧🇷
What the Frick, yes!!! You're prepping to build a proper house?? That's freaking awesome!! Looking forward to the video~
Two days later makes cannon..... two weeks later his airfield is finished.
two months later he starts a mars colony... two years later he launches the first fusion powered intergalactic alcubierre drive spaceship.
me encantan tus videos, por no haces más videos de técnicas de agricultura.
Молодец. Из ничего хороший инструмент сделал.
Даже без наковальни
@@smalL_0013 。787。8
I love channels like this!
Hey buddy you need to clean off that scale of the rock when you go and heat up the bar of iron
Oh god he has the power now.
Whats next?
Log cabin?
Or terracotta house (clay)
Love your vids
🥳
Wait, when did you put another handle on the hammer?
It was in the last 2 vids I think
i love this channel, been watching since the first video, very cool to watch all the things you build/make, was very exciting when you first started to experiment with iron, and to now have mastered it!
This is definitely steel, you can see the hardness of the metal, and it does hold an edge. Medium to low carbon grade steel I'd guess. I liked the other video where he made those tongs he was using a piece of bamboo prior to that.
yea it's steel, otherwise quenching the edge would've been pointless.
Good job! This is so cool and relaxing to watch.
This bloomery steel seems to hold very well ! Amazing that the punching operation can be done this "cold" without cracking the material. Good job...
because he use high grade purchased steel?
shimba90 he definitely did
We don’t see any folding/welding operations almost always necessary with bloomery steel especially when forging tools you need to clean it or the material will fall appart due to the sponginess of the bloom itself. May be he did all this off camera ?
And it’s not a socket axe from early iron age.
Top quality stuff dude, your videos are getting on another level recently.
Никакой техники безопасности. Ни рукавиц, ни очков, да к тому ж и без штанов и босой... Куда администрация смотрит? Уволить всех)))
...
Он еще не умеет делать спец одежду, нужно немного подождать, эволюция однако ! ))
Æ
I love yor channel 😍 😍 😍 😍 😍
Самый классный азиат из серии "примитивный".
На самом деле это просто охеренно и достаочно познавательно
Надеюсь ты это смотрел не в 2 часа ночи?!
This guy's videos have come a long way.
Where'd you get those perfectly rectangular ingots from?
It looks sketchy isn't it.
well, in earlier videos he has proven that he is able to make iron. If he now cuts some corners after the fact, I think that's ok. I don't want to watch him make iron ingots for the next 2 years...
He has the skill to do it and his tools could work
The downside of using green wood like this is that it will shrink when it dries out making the tight fit useless pretty soon.
You could use a method chair makers do, put one end of the wood stick into hot sand drying it out extremely well above normal humidity, then make it a tight fight for the axe.
Then when you intruduce the wood to the humid air again the wood will expand slightly and make the fit even more tight. (the upside is it requires no glue and little effort.)
This way you can make sure the axe won't come flying off. Also to further increase the safety put a wedge in like Aethelwyrn said.
The iron seem odly ... rectangular and uniform ...
You need to watch more if his videos. he refined the bars from an iron bloom. All it takes is time and patience
even if he HAD bought the bars (he didn't), it wouldn't negate the work seen in this video
@@MoRockHound he skipped quite a lot of the process in the bloom to bar video. But that doesn't negate his awesome work in his videos, humanity took thousands of years to be able to work iron properly, and it was a combined effort, there were people gathering wood, others making charcoal and so on. A single guy would never be able to do it by himself back then, those corners need to be cut in order for this kind of videos to be made, or it would take him an absurd amount of time just to be able to produce a single bar, which would be boring as hell.
he bought the iron
Fernando Rodrigues dos Santos - You do know he was gone for about nine months? That would have given him the time he needed.
If we only had bamboo in the colder climes, civilization would have advanced much more rapidly. That stuff is so versatile, used in everything. I also like his bellows. It explains why a metal Smith was so valuable, to make those iron tools he sure went through alot to make them. I have to have respect for the effort.
Estos son los amigos que debería tener aliados para el fin del mundo
какой же ты молодец !какая сила духа ! я восхищяюсь твоими трудами !
всё, теперь лесу конец... теперь у него есть нормальный топор...
Kirill kyznetsov в Европе так все леса и вырубили. По несколько раз.
Ему бы Штилек🤣
@@Everything_is_an_illusion_13 это нормальный топор-инвалид)))
Он скоро завод построит... Машиностроительный!
@@Everything_is_an_illusion_13 По сравнению с тем, что у него был до этого...
I think investing the time to make a small anvil might be a good idea, forge a spike out of the lower section and drive it into a large and heavy log.
Maybe some sturdier tongs too, now that you are really getting the experience of this blacksmithing
I mean a stobe works as fine as an anvil. Hell, high quality swords from the early medieval era were forged on those things.
У друга из Вьетнама есть прогресс,
Он скоро сделает болты и гайки.
Топор как феникс из огня воскрес.
У парня точно из железа яйки!
ПРИВЕТ АНТОНИ . ТАК ЭТО ВЬЕТНАМ??????????
@@АтиКул Да, это конечно Вьетнам!
Poxa... parabéns... Trabalho bonito, sistema bem primitivo, mas muito bom
Добавлено 30 секунд назад, вот это я вовремя зашёл!
держи в курсе
Amazing bit of work well done.
Huh just found out that you have subtitles
鉄を鍛える時に使用されるハンマー、アップデートされていますね!
このチャンネルの更新本当に最近の楽しみです!
動画投稿今後も期待しています!頑張って下さい!
8:15 есть пробитие!
This guy just built a workable civilization from zero.
next: WHEELS
Now this Asian Primitive Technology Guy is the best. Taught us how to make iron. Blacksmith tools. Now his recent tool is an axe. I cannot wait for the future what his project will be. Make an rifle? Lol Just kidding. I actually like his videos than other Asian Primitive Technology Channels because they're clickbaits. I learn nothing from them and they're not entertaining. This guy is very knowledgeable and entertaining. Keep making more videos.
but all I'm iron where did you get it from?
Watch the previous videos. He already unlocked the achievent of processing iron ore. Now he can use his UA-cam money to buy iron blanks from a local market.
a shop