Just wanted to say thank you for bringing back my bayonet from the dead. This blade only had sentimental value to me, I don’t care if it’s worth $10 or $1000. I like the way it turned out. Thank you again.
I didn't think it would be possible to salvage that scabbard but by putting the bayonet in a more subdued state you did a great job of making them still come out as a matched set. Nice work, thanks for sharing!
I'm no weapons expert and I don't know what this sword would have looked like in it's heyday but I wasn't a fan of the black finish you applied. I liked the way the blade, crossguard and pummel looked around 10:30 but that's just me. Otherwise awesome restoration, turned out looking great! :)
Неплохая работа, но у меня несколько вопросов: зачем стачивать часть клинка по всей длине, не проще ли было доварить часть? Зачем надо было приклеивать деревянные накладки?
Перед тем как реставрировать, ознакомьтесь как должна выглядеть вещь. Накладки должны быть не на заклёпках, а на винтах. Ну а кнопка на холодной сварке это что-то с чем-то.
What a fantastic restoration on this bayonet. Everything came out amazing. The handle and sheath are really really awesome. Looks great as one Unit. Take care
While it is very similar, I can attest it’s a Turkish Mauser bayonet as the Turkish crest was still visible stamped in to the base of the blade. The same crest that was stamped in to my Turkish made mauser. I didn’t think my blade had a chance of being brought back let alone looking as good as it did. I was surprised and very happy to have it look so good.
@@ahrenben-judah6094 Turkish bayonets with this blade shape were not produced. In addition, the Turkish bayonets had a leather sheath. The export German bayonets had a steel scabbard, but with a different suspension (and with a different blade shape). The video shows a bayonet for Arisaka early type 30 (still without the bend of the cross).
@@ahrenben-judah6094 I do believe it is a Japanese bayonet for the Arisaka rifle which I have 3 of with bayonets.there are different variations of these bayonets
It's a type 99 japanese bayonet from WW2 not a turkish one. Similar to the type 30 of 1897, the only difference being a straight quillon instead of a curved one for the type 30.
Sorry for the criticism, but please invest in building rigs that for example helps you knock out the dents in the metal instead of covering it up in black paint. The same goes with the blueing of the steel. I'd rather see a series where you take extra time in actually researching the weapon and how it was supposed to look like and then restoring it to it's former glory. This kind of destroys it in my opinion. No hard feeling, respect your hard work!
I agree entirely. Respect to the video but,,,, I was once told by an atique dealer that restoring these old bayonets actually devalues them. If the aim is to encrease it's value, this is a fail, if you wanna make an interesting video and aren't worried about the value then no worries!
Nice restoration work, that piece was nearly fit for the bin before you got it. Really enjoyed the way you de-constructed and then re-constructed - it shows viewers how the bayonet was originally put together, never seen that on any bayonet restoration before. Look forward to your next project.
@@alfrede.neuman9082 Somewhere in the region of more than 8 million Type 30 bayonets produced, and I have seven examples of my own. He did that one a favour, believe me.
What a wonderful restoration! That was absolutely stunning! I absolutely love watching you do all your videos and cleaning and restoring priceless items to me since I’m a historian I really enjoy all of it! Merry Christmas to you and bless you
5:00Я бы сначала сделал напайки, а потом шлифовка🤔. А вместо вд40 использую обычное "трансформаторное" масло. Его можно достать ведро бесплатно🤣. Налил бочку 120 литров и всё бросаю туда на недельку.. Работает! За рестоврацию спасибо👍 удачи!
Growing up in the 50s there were tons of those around. We would use them when we played army out in the fields. Running around waving them and cutting brush out in the “battlefield”, how the heck did we survive?
I have one of these that my dad brought back from the war, it's in great shape but unfortunately they aren't worth that much money, not that I would even sell it my dad past away over 50 years ago when I was very young
Hey so first question can I send you thing to restore? If so I have a 1960s maybe 70s kabar duel bladed knife.anyway my moms great grandpa took it to war came back and gave it to her. Just wanted to know if you could clean it up?
Awesome job my friend you restored a piece of History that can now be shown to Future Generations it sucks you weren't able to find markings on it but beautiful nonetheless keep up the good work
I concur with a previous commentator, that bayonet was a Type 30 for a Japanese rifle, not any kind of Turkish Mauser. And you should not call what was done to it a "restoration", "repair", "refurbishment" or any such thing. That was an amateur tear-down, grinding off of rust and pitting, and reassembly using incorrect replacement parts. It looks "cleaned up" to someone unfamiliar with these historic pieces. To collectors it just looks ruined of its historic condition by the attempt to make it look nice. A "restoration" would not have glued the grips on. A "restoration" would not have blued the blade. A "restoration" would not have straightened the edge. Nothing was "restored" to its original condition here.
Absolutely, the arsenal marks and the serial numbers have been removed - no need to mention back in the past most of the type 30 - especially the earlier made ones are not blued neither
I am sad after watching this ,i am my self a collector from germany collecting 6+ years and that is horrible now you just have the metal ,no marks...just wortless metal
It looks great and you did a wonderful job restoring it as well. Yeah I love old war stuff as well Looked like who ever sent it cleaned most of the rust off for you Enjoyed the video and I gave it a Thumbs Up
This bayonet is Japanese, used on Arisaka rifles and type99 light machine guns. American bayonet model1917 refer P13/P14 could be fitted to trench shot gun.
It's always a good idea to get pictures of what an object or item looked like new before attempting to "restore" it. I can assure you that's not what it's supposed to look like at all and basically lost all of it's value in the process of making it look nice...
Was looking Great right up till you decided to tint the Blade , crossguard that disgusting tint. To what would have been a beautiful restoration. A true restoration is what it should look like and not you just think looks cool.
If you like this WW2 Bayonet check out my US M1 Garand restoration ua-cam.com/video/MySs7IILk6w/v-deo.html
Hello Friend. It was very good. Hugs from Brazil.
Just wanted to say thank you for bringing back my bayonet from the dead.
This blade only had sentimental value to me, I don’t care if it’s worth $10 or $1000. I like the way it turned out. Thank you again.
I'm glad you like how your bayonet came out. It was a great project to work on.
How much did the resto cost?
I didn't think it would be possible to salvage that scabbard but by putting the bayonet in a more subdued state you did a great job of making them still come out as a matched set. Nice work, thanks for sharing!
A truly wonderful restoration. The only thing I wasn't too thrilled about was turning the blade blue. That, to me, kinda ruined it.
Blueing just doesn’t look good in general. I love this channel but I hate when he does that, I’m always dissatisfied with the result.
I'm no weapons expert and I don't know what this sword would have looked like in it's heyday but I wasn't a fan of the black finish you applied. I liked the way the blade, crossguard and pummel looked around 10:30 but that's just me.
Otherwise awesome restoration, turned out looking great! :)
I think it was ruined as soon as he added bluing to it.
Awesome job💪🏻💪🏻💪🏻
Лайк за трудолюбие, сама реставрация на троечку.
Неплохая работа, но у меня несколько вопросов: зачем стачивать часть клинка по всей длине, не проще ли было доварить часть? Зачем надо было приклеивать деревянные накладки?
Great job! 👍👍👍
Fantastic Restoration! 👏
Перед тем как реставрировать, ознакомьтесь как должна выглядеть вещь. Накладки должны быть не на заклёпках, а на винтах. Ну а кнопка на холодной сварке это что-то с чем-то.
What a fantastic restoration on this bayonet. Everything came out amazing. The handle and sheath are really really awesome. Looks great as one Unit.
Take care
This is a Japanese bayonet for the Arisaka rifle, model 1897.
While it is very similar, I can attest it’s a Turkish Mauser bayonet as the Turkish crest was still visible stamped in to the base of the blade. The same crest that was stamped in to my Turkish made mauser.
I didn’t think my blade had a chance of being brought back let alone looking as good as it did. I was surprised and very happy to have it look so good.
@@ahrenben-judah6094 Turkish bayonets with this blade shape were not produced.
In addition, the Turkish bayonets had a leather sheath. The export German bayonets had a steel scabbard, but with a different suspension (and with a different blade shape).
The video shows a bayonet for Arisaka early type 30 (still without the bend of the cross).
@@ahrenben-judah6094 I do believe it is a Japanese bayonet for the Arisaka rifle which I have 3 of with bayonets.there are different variations of these bayonets
It's a type 99 japanese bayonet from WW2 not a turkish one. Similar to the type 30 of 1897, the only difference being a straight quillon instead of a curved one for the type 30.
100% Japanese
WOW AWESOME
Very nice. Thank you.
Sorry for the criticism, but please invest in building rigs that for example helps you knock out the dents in the metal instead of covering it up in black paint. The same goes with the blueing of the steel.
I'd rather see a series where you take extra time in actually researching the weapon and how it was supposed to look like and then restoring it to it's former glory. This kind of destroys it in my opinion.
No hard feeling, respect your hard work!
Your comment has allowed me to not go on the rant I was about to do. Thank you.
000
I agree entirely.
Respect to the video but,,,,
I was once told by an atique dealer that restoring these old bayonets actually devalues them.
If the aim is to encrease it's value, this is a fail, if you wanna make an interesting video and aren't worried about the value then no worries!
Nice restoration work, that piece was nearly fit for the bin before you got it.
Really enjoyed the way you de-constructed and then re-constructed - it shows viewers how the bayonet was originally put together, never seen that on any bayonet restoration before.
Look forward to your next project.
@@alfrede.neuman9082 Somewhere in the region of more than 8 million Type 30 bayonets produced, and I have seven examples of my own.
He did that one a favour, believe me.
Well done I have the same bayonet makes me want to restore it
Wow, that is awesome. Great work.
Wow , good job bringing her back to fighting trim.
That’s pretty nice
What a great job!!!!!
What a wonderful restoration! That was absolutely stunning! I absolutely love watching you do all your videos and cleaning and restoring priceless items to me since I’m a historian I really enjoy all of it! Merry Christmas to you and bless you
Incredible 👏 👏 👏
Hello Friend. It was very good. Hugs from Brazil.
Impressed by the wonderful restoration of the bayonet ~♪
Beautiful restoration good job well done
5:00Я бы сначала сделал напайки, а потом шлифовка🤔. А вместо вд40 использую обычное "трансформаторное" масло. Его можно достать ведро бесплатно🤣. Налил бочку 120 литров и всё бросаю туда на недельку.. Работает! За рестоврацию спасибо👍 удачи!
Красавец получился!!!
Well I think you did a lovely job of that. It looks awesome well done keep up the restoration’s you do great work my friend 👍👍👍😊😊😊♥️
nice restoration dear keep it up
Growing up in the 50s there were tons of those around. We would use them when we played army out in the fields. Running around waving them and cutting brush out in the “battlefield”, how the heck did we survive?
Amazing job
Amazing restoration👍👍👍
железо отличное!!!
Friend, a decent job a storm of liked. Congratulations and always continue like this. a brazilian hug
Great job. I enjoyed watching this. 👍
Excelente restauración mis más sinceras felicitaciones 👍👏👏👏
Good job
Very good work 👍
Greet job man
I have one of these that my dad brought back from the war, it's in great shape but unfortunately they aren't worth that much money, not that I would even sell it my dad past away over 50 years ago when I was very young
Very cool.
Belissima
Uma obra de arte
Makes me wanna go out and buy a couple of bayonets. Really nice job.
That sounds weird out of context
Sweet 👍🏻 👍🏻
Super 👌.
lookin' good, nice work, stay safe and have a go0d week...
Thanks Bob and have a great weekend too.
Замечательная работа. Нет такой же реставрации(с полной разборкой) по штыку к винтовке Арисака?
Show de bola meu amigo.
looks perfect! you are really talented!
Thank you, I love working on all these old items.
PB Blaster is good stuff. BUT I don't know how many cans of the stuff I had that stopped spraying when the can was still full.
This is not a restoration. Now this bayonet is not suitable for a collector. It is damaged by the "repairer". No longer has any collector value.
I have a new one from 1907 and it is in very good condition
Level god man.
Hey so first question can I send you thing to restore?
If so I have a 1960s maybe 70s kabar duel bladed knife.anyway my moms great grandpa took it to war came back and gave it to her. Just wanted to know if you could clean it up?
Beautiful work!
Awesome job my friend you restored a piece of History that can now be shown to Future Generations it sucks you weren't able to find markings on it but beautiful nonetheless keep up the good work
I love how you “blacked” it out. Great video!
Why don’t you boil the metal and card it to convert/get the rust off?
i was in heaven until you blacked the blade all the work was wasted making it clean and shiny
I concur with a previous commentator, that bayonet was a Type 30 for a Japanese rifle, not any kind of Turkish Mauser. And you should not call what was done to it a "restoration", "repair", "refurbishment" or any such thing. That was an amateur tear-down, grinding off of rust and pitting, and reassembly using incorrect replacement parts. It looks "cleaned up" to someone unfamiliar with these historic pieces. To collectors it just looks ruined of its historic condition by the attempt to make it look nice. A "restoration" would not have glued the grips on. A "restoration" would not have blued the blade. A "restoration" would not have straightened the edge. Nothing was "restored" to its original condition here.
Absolutely, the arsenal marks and the serial numbers have been removed - no need to mention back in the past most of the type 30 - especially the earlier made ones are not blued neither
I am sad after watching this ,i am my self a collector from germany collecting 6+ years and that is horrible now you just have the metal ,no marks...just wortless metal
My friend had one exactly like that one I am not sure if it really was the same thing but it pretty darn close
Japanese bayonets, like this one look better with their blades polished bright!
I cannot believe people don’t use vise guards.
It looks great and you did a wonderful job restoring it as well. Yeah I love old war stuff as well
Looked like who ever sent it cleaned most of the rust off for you
Enjoyed the video and I gave it a Thumbs Up
@@alfrede.neuman9082
It was my blade. It’s a sentimental item therefore monetary and historical value is inconsequential.
WW2 Arisaka bayonet
Bought & Restored
Отличная работа 👍. Скажи пожалуйста какого года этот штык-нож. Спасибо
👏👏👏👏👏👏
Dang! My first thought was "I hope he didn't pay for this". It was in terrible shape.
WWII japanese arisaka type 30 bayonet
Это не Маузер. Это Британский ли энфилд
i ll take it yeah
German baynets have not jackets going over rifle barrels look like a brittish 303 baynet
Like bayonet japanese arisaka
Una obsevacion no limpiaste la empuñadura, es como si te cambiaras y no te bañaras. Te ves limpio por fuera pero sucio por dentro. Es para mejorar.
👍👍👍
German bayonets were long wow
Those are thick and hard to sharpen
fun fact this bayonet was used on shotguns
This bayonet is Japanese, used on Arisaka rifles and type99 light machine guns. American bayonet model1917 refer P13/P14 could be fitted to trench shot gun.
@@PleksiHeddamo Nerd
sir i have 3 bayonet like that ww2 bayonet
Satin black is your friend, not gloss
That’s actually a Japanese type 30 bayonet mate
👍👍👍👏👏👏🎉🎉🎉😉😉😉
Good restoration but it's a japanese bayonet I have one just like it .
eski hali daha iyiydi.rezil etti
Was better looking with a White wood handle.
Could of been better
Cover of sword was not properly restored
The bayonet looks like a WWII JAPANESE bayonet
Дизлайк за сварку
It's always a good idea to get pictures of what an object or item looked like new before attempting to "restore" it. I can assure you that's not what it's supposed to look like at all and basically lost all of it's value in the process of making it look nice...
Sarungnya masih penyok
Zniszczyłeś bezpowrotnie bagnet tym szlifowaniem i upiększaniem .
Stracił na wartości.
Więcej tego nie rób!
Nie tylko wartość ale i historia poszła się gwizdać.
Was looking Great right up till you decided to tint the Blade , crossguard that disgusting tint. To what would have been a beautiful restoration. A true restoration is what it should look like and not you just think looks cool.
Немецкий штык..Сталь говно..был у меня такой..на огороде нашел..Пытался восстановить..выбросил..🤔
Not upto the mark. U have already set too high standards. But this time definitely u fail to meet.
The teeny biplane fortuitously attack because jute inexplicably pretend at a kindhearted leather. chunky, zesty rod
Google Translate is obviously not working well today.
L