Amazing Fastest Stone Splitting Technique - Incredible Modern Granite Mining Machines Technology ▶2

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  • Опубліковано 28 вер 2024
  • - #Part2 Amazing Fastest Stone Splitting Technique - #StoneSplitting
    - Incredible Modern Granite Mining Machines Technology ▶2
    - Fastest Granite Stone Cutting Machines
    Cre:
    Carrières du Hainaut
    Web: www.carrieresduhainaut.com/
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,7 тис.

  • @jerryhuber3653
    @jerryhuber3653 3 роки тому +401

    The most amazing part of this, is that dude’s hand eye coordination. Never missed his mark!

    • @thefolder3086
      @thefolder3086 3 роки тому +13

      Video: modern rock splitting
      The ancient Egyptian who came up with it:

    • @nickh5081
      @nickh5081 3 роки тому +23

      You swing heavy hammers for a living you learn REAL fast to be accurate!

    • @ABHav0k55
      @ABHav0k55 3 роки тому +3

      Idk why but I guess someone named Jerry would be impressed by hand eye coordination

    • @Twisted052
      @Twisted052 3 роки тому +1

      @@ABHav0k55 🤣

    • @Twisted052
      @Twisted052 3 роки тому +1

      When swinging a hammer at a nail, punch, chisel, what ever, don't watch the head of it you will miss more, watch and swing towards the hole it's going into.

  • @SomeoneCommenting
    @SomeoneCommenting 3 роки тому +47

    Remember that you can do this with granite thanks to the crystalline structure that it has. Other types of rock will never split that nicely no matter what technique you use.

  • @Diecastclassicist
    @Diecastclassicist 3 роки тому +56

    Best video of turning big rocks into small rocks that I’ve ever seen.

    • @wolfrainexxx
      @wolfrainexxx 3 роки тому

      Wait until you see TNT videos ;)

    • @Ante_Knezevic
      @Ante_Knezevic 3 роки тому

      @Michael Teret What about the clickbait? Your life is poor.

  • @wparo
    @wparo 3 роки тому +54

    I think video shake stabilisation was invented because of the person filming

    • @chevyDboyMike
      @chevyDboyMike 3 роки тому +3

      You probably wouldn't hold anything steady either after a day of literally hammering it away at rocks

    • @Lisa-oe1do
      @Lisa-oe1do 3 роки тому

      I had to stop watching, it was honestly making me motion sick.

    • @enmarzz
      @enmarzz 3 роки тому +1

      Lmao

  • @МихаилКотусов
    @МихаилКотусов 3 роки тому +34

    Автор можно было написать : Самый быстрый и простой способ изготовления кирпича из натурального камня .
    А также визуализация поговорки : круглое носить , квадратнок катать .
    Интересное видео .

    • @qvaigon1238
      @qvaigon1238 3 роки тому +1

      прям с языка снял))

    • @56Touch
      @56Touch 3 роки тому

      Название видео на английском, это ютуб перевел название автоматомсмотря смотря какие геоданные, есть такая функция вобщем.

  • @typerexc
    @typerexc 3 роки тому +89

    Granite: "Do the thousands upon thousands of years it took for me to form mean anything to you?"
    This guy: "Not really."

    • @pod11th31
      @pod11th31 3 роки тому

      Granite is from lava, it is not calcium that forms from animal shells over many years ;P

    • @TheShootist
      @TheShootist 3 роки тому

      actually jingles granite doesn't take long at all.

    • @imaencuru
      @imaencuru 3 роки тому

      @Shane Patrick Granite is actually one of the only rocks you can split that cleanly with hammers and spikes, it splits along the edges of the crystal structures within it. Using this technique on limestone would result in much rougher edges as there's no crystals holding everything together

  • @brianegendorf2023
    @brianegendorf2023 3 роки тому +10

    This is amazing to watch. I love the technique of throwing smaller rocks in between when you separate them to keep them from falling back and closing the crack again..

  • @kennethsmith3260
    @kennethsmith3260 3 роки тому +32

    That's hard work swinging a sledge hammer all day, you'd sleep well after a day's work.

    • @elonmust7470
      @elonmust7470 3 роки тому +3

      yep. makes your core one of tungsten, as well.

    • @steves3760
      @steves3760 3 роки тому +1

      The liberals in America are cringing at the thought of work.

    • @raymonds.9021
      @raymonds.9021 3 роки тому +5

      @@steves3760 I would just prefer the rich people we all work for pay their fair share of taxes

    • @steves3760
      @steves3760 3 роки тому

      @@raymonds.9021 If only you paid a fraction of the taxes that rich people pay. How about paying your "fair share"?.

    • @raymonds.9021
      @raymonds.9021 3 роки тому +7

      @@steves3760 It isn't about what fraction of the total income taxes they pay. While we are on fractions though let's talk about how all of the employees under the rich people have only a fraction of what their corporate overlords do. They also work only a fraction as hard as the thousands if not millions of employees generating the money for them.

  • @FractalMannequin
    @FractalMannequin 3 роки тому +18

    “Aliens”. But it always has been physics done right.

    • @zx208
      @zx208 3 роки тому +2

      Your mom was done right

    • @alphagt62
      @alphagt62 3 роки тому +2

      I know, an army of men like him could build the 7 wonders of the world in no time. No aliens required.

    • @FractalMannequin
      @FractalMannequin 3 роки тому +1

      @@alphagt62 Some people lack the right amount of imagination to find real solutions to problems. So they make'em up, and aliens are the easiest one.

    • @Bambuzzsprosse
      @Bambuzzsprosse 3 роки тому +2

      @@zx208 Zzzzzzzz......

  • @Shanidar1
    @Shanidar1 3 роки тому +44

    This is how my wife breaks me down..bit by bit, takes her time but gets there in the end.

  • @jerroddooley374
    @jerroddooley374 3 роки тому +24

    Holy shit! I don't know why this video was so satisfying for me, but it literally blew my mind. Wow

    • @СергейБольшаков-ж6э
      @СергейБольшаков-ж6э 3 роки тому

      ...а всё Египет пирамиды... пришли и вручную всё построили...

    • @thefolder3086
      @thefolder3086 3 роки тому

      Video: modern rock splitting
      The ancient Egyptian who came up with it:

    • @Thetreetroll
      @Thetreetroll 3 роки тому

      You got to check out those chiropractor videos! That's a satisfying crunch equal to Bubble Wrap!

    • @gsmarchand
      @gsmarchand 3 роки тому

      I don't think it deserved a HOLY SHIT but hey.

  • @jondavey4437
    @jondavey4437 3 роки тому +16

    Saw a little old Italian fella do this years ago 💪

  • @hawkkim1974
    @hawkkim1974 3 роки тому +128

    this guy is really strong. most people don't know how hard that hammering is.

    • @FreeSpeechXtremist
      @FreeSpeechXtremist 3 роки тому +15

      Landscaping for 15 years gives you some appreciation .. hurts my back watching him the vibrations coming back through that hammer!

    • @flyingphotography5770
      @flyingphotography5770 3 роки тому +9

      And God help him if he misses. He’s swinging that hammer like a framer with a 20 oz.

    • @SPECTORMANZ
      @SPECTORMANZ 3 роки тому +7

      Sorry to have to correct you but this guy is F'ing Strong!

    • @Prodmullefc
      @Prodmullefc 3 роки тому +9

      it's deceptive watching these videos because all these dang professionals make this stuff look so easy. I watch a lot of wood working videos and some of these people use things like axes and chisels as if they're slicing a piece of bread

    • @markuyehara7880
      @markuyehara7880 3 роки тому +9

      All you need to see is the way he easily picks up and tosses the blocks. His grip strength is really something.

  • @jordanthomas4379
    @jordanthomas4379 3 роки тому +52

    “Only aliens could have cut those stones”
    Hold my beer

    • @jordanthomas4379
      @jordanthomas4379 3 роки тому

      @Bob Watters great points, I can imagine a hypothetical ancient human maybe asking for a porcelain flushable toilet and central heating instead.

    • @jamesvincent1567
      @jamesvincent1567 3 роки тому

      @@jordanthomas4379 not sure they’d ask for heat on account of living in a desert sure it gets cold but I think heat is a bigger issue

  • @lorenwilson8128
    @lorenwilson8128 3 роки тому +11

    This looks like limestone, not granite. It's way too soft and splits too straight. The feather and wedge technique has been used for centuries.

  • @DavidKoper
    @DavidKoper 3 роки тому +31

    Без базара современные технологии каменного века . Парень точно предок Тутанхамона

    • @Aloner
      @Aloner 3 роки тому

      Не предок, а потомок, если уж так. Да и вообще, можно подумать Тутанхамон сам строил пирамиды.

    • @Drak0sha13
      @Drak0sha13 3 роки тому

      Это же робот. Да, очень похож на человека.

    • @БатуТаш-ъ9и
      @БатуТаш-ъ9и 3 роки тому +2

      Все жто постанова заранее заклееные блоки

    • @andreykot8373
      @andreykot8373 3 роки тому +1

      @@Drak0sha13 Андройд с планеты Нибиру, ведь только они могут обрабатывать сверхпрочный гранит, а этот даже без плазменного резака.

    • @василийпетров-б4и
      @василийпетров-б4и 3 роки тому

      @@andreykot8373 Точно. У Тутанхамона было массово налажено производство стальных кувалд. И ломиков из арматуры. И кусочки он колет не 10-20 тонн веса. Сразу предупреждаю, во внеземное происхождение перамид не верю.

  • @boydberends5974
    @boydberends5974 3 роки тому +76

    This man is an artist! Regrettably he probably recieves less pay that he actually deserves. I cannot imagine how any relatively overpaid UA-cam employee is as skillful as that.

    • @nickh5081
      @nickh5081 3 роки тому +4

      It's all relative. He's probably paid pretty reasonably for where he lives, but there's plenty of people that can do what he does which makes him replaceable. If they all demand too much money, they get replaced by some of the machines we see later in the video. It's the way it is.

    • @fbo717
      @fbo717 3 роки тому +1

      why would u think he isnt payed a lot? JW what abou this man makes you think that... HUH

    • @Bambuzzsprosse
      @Bambuzzsprosse 3 роки тому +6

      @@fbo717 Well, the fact alone he is a handyman leads to the assumption that he is WAY underpayed for what he is doing all day long since nearly all handyman in nearly every country of the world are underpayed.

    • @nickh5081
      @nickh5081 3 роки тому +1

      @@Bambuzzsprosse Are you kidding? If you're using the term "handyman" to describe skilled laborers or licensed tradesmen, then you're way off. In Canada skilled labor is paid VERY well - way better than most people with university degrees and better than most professionals.

    • @nickh5081
      @nickh5081 3 роки тому

      @Spykokwak Sure, but some are much easier to replace than others. That's why unions still exist, to make it difficult (or impossible) to replace workers that are useless and easily replaced.

  • @johnwicksfoknpencil
    @johnwicksfoknpencil 3 роки тому +67

    This video should be played in physics classes and be titled: The Power of Leverage

    • @Roskabum
      @Roskabum 3 роки тому +5

      the power of cleavage planes

    • @thesauce1682
      @thesauce1682 3 роки тому +6

      The power of bing bing bang bong ting tang tang and then boom.

    • @user-vp1sc7tt4m
      @user-vp1sc7tt4m 3 роки тому +1

      or, Practical application of the understanding of various forms of crystal structure with a focus on Granite.

    • @Tangarisu
      @Tangarisu 3 роки тому

      @@Roskabum ding ding.
      This stuff is practically calcite.
      Which will form perfect cuts along any 90 degree axis.

    • @Tangarisu
      @Tangarisu 3 роки тому

      @@user-vp1sc7tt4m not granite, limestone

  • @Delanuve
    @Delanuve 3 роки тому +5

    Don't underestimate this guys strength. He's swinging that hammer like a heavyweight + speed. Very impressive.

    • @aaronlarsen7447
      @aaronlarsen7447 10 місяців тому

      I'd be tired in 30 seconds. That guy is an animal.

  • @frend6827
    @frend6827 3 роки тому +35

    Не, ну всё правильно. Круглое - тащим, квадратное - катим. Технология не нарушена.

    • @Жека-Югра
      @Жека-Югра 3 роки тому +3

      Мне кажется камень не прочный какой то.

    • @proofman7637
      @proofman7637 3 роки тому +1

      @@Жека-Югра гранит не прочный? Братан те кажется

    • @Читатель1
      @Читатель1 3 роки тому +1

      @@proofman7637 чет не похоже на гранит

    • @mario5800xm
      @mario5800xm 3 роки тому

      @@Жека-Югра Гранит имеет слоистую структуру. Его разбивают вдоль пластин, а затем более тонкие куски можно разбить поперек.

  • @hendrsb33
    @hendrsb33 3 роки тому +5

    I find this all impressive... but especially by what one man with a few chisels and a sledgehammer can do. Gives me an inkling of how the Parthenon and other ancient structures were built.

    • @mstr293
      @mstr293 2 роки тому +3

      No, it's aliens and their superior tech.
      I'm being sarcastic, btw!

  • @mikehurricane5767
    @mikehurricane5767 3 роки тому +4

    Awesome video . I am a retired Master Craftsman . My Grandfather moved very heavy engines with ease . It's funny how these " experts " of ancient Egypt still scratch their pointy little heads trying to figure out how the large stones were quarried and moved . Not really a big secret . I possess the knowledge and tools to build a home without any power tools . Building anything is 9/10s common sense and 1/10th mathematics .

    • @Areainvestigations
      @Areainvestigations 10 місяців тому

      In a time without skilled tradesmen and artisans such as master masons, people think anything they don't understand is "alien magic." And yet when I visited a quarry about an hour from my home to pick stone for a memorial for my family's cemetery plot, there were a handful of guys there doing just this kind of thing, most were Mexican and Central American guys who learned on the job from the one old stonemason who'd recently passed away. Bring back the guilds! These guys are artists.

  • @TheGreg6466
    @TheGreg6466 3 роки тому +3

    this guy at the start has pin point precision with those hammers. I feel like I'd end up with a pile of rough rocks and gravel if I tried that, this guy makes neat right angles every time, very impressive.

  • @niknoks7638
    @niknoks7638 3 роки тому +11

    Can you imagine this guy getting home and the wife say “how was your day love?” ......the skill and level of fitness this guy has is very humbling 👏

    • @KwatsanDarbinian
      @KwatsanDarbinian 3 роки тому +1

      Go get a real job play Minecraft all day isn't a real job

    • @adamatch9624
      @adamatch9624 3 роки тому +1

      @@KwatsanDarbinian not true a job is anything you make money off

    • @goat9199
      @goat9199 3 роки тому

      Duhh, me break rock

  • @MountainGuerrilla
    @MountainGuerrilla 3 роки тому +5

    whie the masin does display gfreat skill with the precision of the blows, it's also incredible to have such fuinely grained stone that splits in nice straight lines.

    • @gregledbetter5942
      @gregledbetter5942 3 роки тому +1

      Exactly,.. as much as the technique is important, the correct stone is just as important

    • @Tangarisu
      @Tangarisu 3 роки тому +1

      Limestone will do that easily thanks to calcite crystals.

    • @gregledbetter5942
      @gregledbetter5942 3 роки тому

      @@LegendLength many stones are workable. Many stones have special molecular makeup that apply to different applications. Just as an example, arrowheads spears or knives. Some people can really pump them out... the right Rock,.. solid technique... whamo.. So yes we've had history with stone, as much as we've needed shelter or building tools, we have needed tools that feed us... ;)

    • @MountainGuerrilla
      @MountainGuerrilla 3 роки тому

      granit wasn't used for many tools, it's hard to work on a small scale, in was used for large monolithic constructs.

  • @ИльяГорячев-м9г
    @ИльяГорячев-м9г 3 роки тому +37

    Ни хрена себе как дрова колет

    • @vladimirvolkov5098
      @vladimirvolkov5098 3 роки тому +1

      Да уж, уважуха парню в самм начале, целыми днями так кувалдой махать это мощь.

    • @DanilR.
      @DanilR. 3 роки тому

      Только как его снизу он отколол

  • @pawz007
    @pawz007 3 роки тому +2

    I forge steel and strike with hammers ALOT...this dude is Omega level good.

  • @andyleighton6969
    @andyleighton6969 3 роки тому +5

    That's some seriously good freestone, the way it splits cleanly in any plane.
    He clearly knows what he's doing, but greatly assisted by his material!

  • @cinsibl.n.8503
    @cinsibl.n.8503 3 роки тому +12

    Это что за камень? Сахар-рафинад? Гранит или базальт покажите!

    • @vallorrb7440
      @vallorrb7440 3 роки тому +2

      инкерманский камень

    • @Galaperu
      @Galaperu 3 роки тому +2

      @@vallorrb7440 или известняк

  • @DoctorBrute
    @DoctorBrute 2 роки тому +1

    This little man is a beast with that Thor Hammer💪

  • @davidk6271
    @davidk6271 3 роки тому +6

    Love the way they throw the rocks in the gaps . Really simple , but really clever also.

  • @corvus1238
    @corvus1238 Рік тому +3

    If only the guy on the camera was as good at his job as the guy on the hammer.....

  • @sniperkarembong
    @sniperkarembong 3 роки тому +5

    it's amazing the stone breaking is perfect

  • @batubelah541
    @batubelah541 Рік тому +1

    Trik dan cara membelah batu yang sangat luar biasa 👍

  • @shama2363
    @shama2363 3 роки тому +14

    мне тут дрова колоть западло а он камни херачит,,,,
    мне а-жно стыдно стало пошол колоть дрова на зиму

  • @juniorberns
    @juniorberns 3 роки тому

    Proud to be apart of mankind.. thank you to all stone cutter, crushers, etc.

  • @johnc8149
    @johnc8149 3 роки тому +8

    All these TV shows saying ancient civilizations needed Alien Technology to do stonework😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @andrenewcomb3708
      @andrenewcomb3708 3 роки тому

      Can't get in without a recommendation. They need the work.

    • @mowvu5380
      @mowvu5380 3 роки тому

      look what tools these guys have. forged steel hammers and chisels. the ancient egyptians only had copper. which is much softer than granite. I'm not saying aliens built the pyramids lol, but it wasn't the ancient egyptians.

  • @enriqueguadarrama2075
    @enriqueguadarrama2075 3 роки тому +2

    Chingón el compa , y que friega mis respetos para esa gente que trabaja asi

  • @memorialvip6500
    @memorialvip6500 3 роки тому +11

    Тяжкий труд

    • @oc284
      @oc284 3 роки тому

      Учиться надо было, а не пиво с корешами у падика лакать.

  • @akeksanderon9124
    @akeksanderon9124 3 роки тому +2

    Этой "современной" технологии несколько тысяч лет...

    • @strufian
      @strufian 2 роки тому +1

      Но не все это знают :-))

  • @loboling9188
    @loboling9188 3 роки тому +12

    "They say he carved that stone from a bigger stone..."

  • @2007christian
    @2007christian 3 роки тому +1

    WOW! This guy is amazing! VERY WELL DONE!

  • @downunda107
    @downunda107 3 роки тому +1

    I admire this Young Man's resilience. All the best to Him and Family!! Thank You. Stephen australia

  • @ИванИванов-э6е7ь
    @ИванИванов-э6е7ь 3 роки тому +8

    Кто не будь скажет,ка он сегодня в офисе устал?

    • @cosmona1t
      @cosmona1t 3 роки тому

      только кто-нибудь

  • @DaleDirt
    @DaleDirt 2 роки тому +1

    This was totally amazing . Thank you .

  • @balijosu
    @balijosu 11 місяців тому +3

    Why the misleading thumbnail?

  • @calvinbass1839
    @calvinbass1839 Рік тому +1

    That first guy had some amazing skills. Hurt my lower back just watching him.

  • @darreno9874
    @darreno9874 3 роки тому +2

    I've cut granite and this guy makes it look so easy, incredible. God bless

    • @jakubmertlik3767
      @jakubmertlik3767 2 роки тому

      Because it is marbele, not granite

    • @darreno9874
      @darreno9874 2 роки тому

      @@jakubmertlik3767 read the title, he is making granite sets

  • @richardnightingale9086
    @richardnightingale9086 3 роки тому +3

    Just like ole Red said “all a fella really needs is a little time and some pressure “.

  • @Fantic156
    @Fantic156 3 роки тому +1

    Seriously skilled ... loved his technique for moving the blocks .. ;)

  • @빛물-f7o
    @빛물-f7o 3 роки тому +8

    장인 앞에서는 돌도 두부처럼 썰리네

  • @sebastiendoublet2347
    @sebastiendoublet2347 3 роки тому +2

    Trop fort ✌🏻
    Juste parfait 😉

  • @dmitriyfranzus2162
    @dmitriyfranzus2162 3 роки тому +2

    Это видео Рен ТВ надо показать, а то инопланетяне инопланетяне, а тут дедовский способ в полной мере. Без лазера и похоже ровно откромсал кусман.

  • @warrendourond7236
    @warrendourond7236 3 роки тому +2

    Look at the ancient high technology being deployed, this guy has to be an immortal ancient alien.

    • @roykinnar
      @roykinnar 3 роки тому

      That's exactly what I was thinking 🤣

  • @normlman
    @normlman Рік тому +1

    Wow, how did they ever learn this ancient high technology? Are they from the past?

  • @anatolich5863
    @anatolich5863 3 роки тому +11

    Самая низкооплачиваемая, это ручная работа, увы XXI Век

    • @IvanKovalov1983
      @IvanKovalov1983 3 роки тому +1

      блин, хорошо что ювелиры и хирурги этого не знают, а то цены задерут

    • @ВалерийШут-ю4м
      @ВалерийШут-ю4м 3 роки тому

      @@IvanKovalov1983 Сейчас и у ювелиров и у хирургов внедрены современные электронные микроскопы и выводиться всё на экран монитора, так что в древние времена об этом и мечтать не могли.. Прогресс везде происходит.

    • @IvanKovalov1983
      @IvanKovalov1983 3 роки тому

      @@ВалерийШут-ю4м и? От этого сложность их работы стала меньше?

  • @DGDG0000000
    @DGDG0000000 3 роки тому +1

    The first guy made me dream. Perfect skills 👌👍.

  • @dragon77411
    @dragon77411 3 роки тому +6

    エジプトの巨大なピラミッドも日本の美しいお城の城壁の石垣も、こうした人力で石に穴を開けてクサビを打って切ってきた。そして今もこの基本的な工法は変わらない。

  • @tokoyasan3883
    @tokoyasan3883 3 роки тому

    大きな物を扱う仕事の方々、本当に尊敬します。ご安全に!

  • @carlosGutierrez-np3ot
    @carlosGutierrez-np3ot 3 роки тому

    Muy bueno y no hay personas hablando muchas gracias fue placentero ver este video

  • @tezca_3662
    @tezca_3662 3 роки тому +1

    Impressionnant, bravo 👏👍

  • @ИльяШулепов-о1я
    @ИльяШулепов-о1я 3 роки тому +11

    Это что за порода камня такая послушная?)

    • @жительстраныаналоговнет
      @жительстраныаналоговнет 3 роки тому +2

      Пеноблоки из газобетона

    • @Серёга-л3б
      @Серёга-л3б 3 роки тому +1

      Мел😄

    • @jackmatroskin6127
      @jackmatroskin6127 3 роки тому

      @@Серёга-л3б белый - известняк, он же мрамор, т.к. с минералогической точки зрения отличий не много. А вот у серого в начале ролика текстуру не разглядеть, с одинаковым вспехом может быть и песчанник и гранит.

  • @gracegodhope819
    @gracegodhope819 3 роки тому +1

    Great man hardworking.god blz you and your family stay safe 🙏❤️

  • @mbarrera47
    @mbarrera47 2 роки тому

    I have this hobby of breaking small and medium rocks (only once in a while). I do this to see what kind of rocks each one is. I decided to look for this on UA-cam, but this and most other videos show people breaking big rocks or bedrock from quarries.

  • @JonahHax
    @JonahHax 3 роки тому +1

    This guy rocks!

  • @dye5915
    @dye5915 3 роки тому +1

    Great video cutting stone is a beautiful skill. Iv always felt basic hewing stone skills should be complusery in education and for people who get in trouble with the cops working with stone hand tools is a self dicipline and a self respect not only do you learn a thousands of years old trade and tradition, you become a part of history it's self and the creation of civilization. some of your stone work could out last many generations. with cutting stone you learn a valuable trade and skill, earn a lot of money and earn self respect and respect from others.

  • @Beekeeping-in-Morocco
    @Beekeeping-in-Morocco 3 роки тому

    Awesome 👌

  • @NeoRipshaft
    @NeoRipshaft 3 роки тому +1

    A beautiful demonstration of why we shouldn't be so quick to take modern technology for granite.

  • @harrylake9388
    @harrylake9388 3 роки тому

    This is true manual labor! Holy shit! What a difference a machine makes.

  • @JeremyWWWWW
    @JeremyWWWWW 3 роки тому +1

    I'm confused. Why does it break along such clean lines with just a few hammer hits? It's as though the stone was formed with an internal linear structure.

    • @mxzyzptlk
      @mxzyzptlk 3 роки тому +1

      I think this will only happen in good clean stone that is in fact without any directional structure. He is making notches in the surface and then a crack is growing from them. The crack will naturally grow perpendicular to the surface, but in lots of materials eg wood, sandstone, slate, that natural crack path gets diverted by the layered or fibrous structure. It's only in the really clean rock that you get neat flat cracks like this.

  • @lucabrasisleepswiththefish77
    @lucabrasisleepswiththefish77 3 роки тому

    Chuck Norris has this guy on his speed-dial!

  • @ВасилийБессонов-ю6д

    Я сильно удивился смотря на этого парня хатя очень много работал физически

  • @samodio586
    @samodio586 3 роки тому

    Who could sit in an office when you could do this? Very cool

  • @josephforrest9472
    @josephforrest9472 3 роки тому

    He should be using a star drill to drill the starter holes. The chisel he is using is called a point or punch Would be best, more efficient to use a bolster chisel to cut the chase between the holes. I love the work. I was taught to strike & bounce the chisel in an easy strike motion instead of blunt shock like he does.

  • @larrymbouche
    @larrymbouche 3 роки тому

    Granite is so hard and compressible that when a weak spot is created (a surface groove, or chiseled crack) like glass, a crack follows the natural grain of the stone, created when it was liquid and slowly cooled until it solidified into strata. Just imagine how many counter tops are in that quarry. Every slab, like wood, has it's own grain and patterns. Polishing brings out the natural beauty of the stone.

  • @ivicakolomejac9994
    @ivicakolomejac9994 3 роки тому

    To do that job you need understand position of stone wains to get that result . Of course experience is everything in getting fast results .
    Respect for hardworking people

  • @TheAngryAtheist
    @TheAngryAtheist Рік тому

    Granite can only be cut with diamond-tipped power tools, therefore, this guy must be an alien.

  • @WillBergson
    @WillBergson 3 роки тому +1

    such a hard work

  • @jorad4887
    @jorad4887 3 роки тому

    Great artisans the few in it's elite class.

  • @chillerfrigotek9121
    @chillerfrigotek9121 2 роки тому

    The master swinging a sledgehammer at the beginning.. God help you.. There is a saying in Turkish: "He takes his bread / his money out of the stone." You are exactly this man.. May your bread be sweet..

  • @KYLEandALEX
    @KYLEandALEX Рік тому

    It's so fun to watch Granite Get popped.

  • @sdfgsrty4524
    @sdfgsrty4524 3 роки тому +7

    Где можно купить такого негра?

  • @ericf7063
    @ericf7063 Рік тому

    I've heard it said, if the only tool in the tool box is a hammer, everything's a nail. If you own a quarry, it's called "open for business."

  • @하이볼-n7t
    @하이볼-n7t 3 роки тому +4

    피라미드의 신비가 여기서 풀리는구나

    • @Jys633
      @Jys633 3 роки тому +1

      나만 그생각 한게 아니구나 ㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋ

  • @papabear3525
    @papabear3525 2 роки тому

    This was passed down by aliens, it’s truly amazing

  • @stevepatrickjarvis
    @stevepatrickjarvis 3 роки тому

    This guys aim is excellent.

  • @bernardmcmahon351
    @bernardmcmahon351 Рік тому

    He’s very good indeed , the type of stone decides how good it will split, most stone has a grain lay

  • @mainframeomega3154
    @mainframeomega3154 3 роки тому +7

    Imagine using aliens as an excuse to make big rocks perfect quadrilateral prisms. Smh.

    • @thechiefofsinners1362
      @thechiefofsinners1362 11 місяців тому

      Notice they had to use extremely large machinery for the bigger stones?

    • @sonnieandjacob
      @sonnieandjacob 11 місяців тому

      ​​@@thechiefofsinners1362they didnt have to they just did. It could be done far more primitive and I have witnessed it first hand. Not to mention what can be accomplished if you have a few hundred thousand slaves working against their will

    • @thechiefofsinners1362
      @thechiefofsinners1362 11 місяців тому

      @@sonnieandjacob so why can't modern scientists figured it out then? Is it because maybe they were more advanced than us in one way or another? I agree we shouldn't be so open minded our brains all out, but I think being that closed minded is just as bad if not worse than dogmatism in religion.

  • @t.bo.a7061
    @t.bo.a7061 2 роки тому

    The perfect building material for the pillars of my cathedral like home

  • @foxopossum
    @foxopossum 3 роки тому

    A master at his trade!!!!!!!!!!

  • @СамсунгА60-р9е
    @СамсунгА60-р9е 3 роки тому +1

    Вот это работа 👍

  • @TheCloakedTiger
    @TheCloakedTiger 3 роки тому

    So this is where all those city park benches come from... Wow!

  • @Dkowa469
    @Dkowa469 3 роки тому

    3000 years from now on Ancient Aliens... "no human could have done this without modern tools."

  • @evgenys3373
    @evgenys3373 3 роки тому +1

    Я представляю, что эти чуваки смогут сделать, если им инструмент нормальный дать )))

  • @varyolla435
    @varyolla435 2 роки тому

    Think of this technique when pondering ancient works such as the Egyptians. The pyramids were built of limestone - which forms in layers like a cake. Most of the limestone blocks which makeup the pyramids reflect = quarrying such as this. So they were not chiseling/sawing each individual block. They rather quickly fractured free approximate size chunks of stone using this technique and levered them from the bedrock onto sleds to cart them away. Very few of the total blocks were more carefully cut and in some cases polished. By driving a line of chisels into bedrock along a precut line you can break free approximate chunks of stone fairly quickly.

  • @11calman
    @11calman 2 роки тому

    Geez, the first guy made it look easy, just like chopping wood. Most probably how the pyramids were built

  • @ultravidz
    @ultravidz 3 роки тому +1

    If I did this for 10 minutes I’d feel it for the next 3 days

  • @Mike-bs5xi
    @Mike-bs5xi 3 роки тому

    Pretty cool how it always brakes straight down

  • @jlloyd2004mcs
    @jlloyd2004mcs Рік тому

    The dozer operator just figured out how the pyramids were built.

  • @ЮрийКононов-ы3э
    @ЮрийКононов-ы3э 3 роки тому +1

    Из этого мужика неплохой боксер бы получился... Удар у него натренированный.