I FOUND A MOUNTAIN OF CANNON BALLS! (or did I?)

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  • Опубліковано 2 лип 2017
  • Check out this huge pile of solid iron balls that Steve showed me up in Nome, Alaska. These are the same type of solid iron balls that you can find for sale on eBay and even on some "relic" sites being sold as cannon balls or grapeshot. This is a perfect example of the massive quantity of "tumbler" balls or "mill" balls that have been manufactured for industrial and mining use and are still in existence today. Don't be fooled by a rip-off artist and buy one of these thinking you have a genuine relic of the American Civil War.
    zz
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    I FOUND A MOUNTAIN OF CANNON BALLS! (or did I?)
    • I FOUND A MOUNTAIN OF ...
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 504

  • @shelbyintheolds
    @shelbyintheolds 7 років тому +47

    Chigs channel has become more educational then todays History Channel on cable.
    Learn something every episode.

    • @dredrotten
      @dredrotten 7 років тому +1

      And Luuuuuven it!

    • @shelbyintheolds
      @shelbyintheolds 7 років тому +1

      To travel and enjoy the field as much as he does and make quality content like he does... Awesome is understatement

  • @fadedcake6547
    @fadedcake6547 7 років тому +59

    It look like a giant pile of Coco Puffs

    • @kellyjackson7889
      @kellyjackson7889 7 років тому +8

      I'm coo-coo for Co-co puffs I'm coo-coo for Co-co puffs I'm OW!!! my *$#@*ing teeth WTF??!!

    • @shelbyintheolds
      @shelbyintheolds 7 років тому

      Faded Cake Hahaha. that was funnym

    • @danielgiovelli8363
      @danielgiovelli8363 7 років тому

      I was literally ready to scroll through hundreds of comments to find this. Glad it was only the second one down lol

  • @PinkBroBlueRope
    @PinkBroBlueRope 7 років тому +18

    i like how the framerate slowed down at 3:20 as if the game was struggling to render all those balls

    • @justinkleeberger5433
      @justinkleeberger5433 7 років тому +1

      LOL, thats what i was thinking too!

    • @syron7996
      @syron7996 7 років тому +1

      I wonder why they took such a high poly model for so useless things.

    • @johannschmidt3389
      @johannschmidt3389 4 роки тому +1

      When the world lags

  • @deanfulford69
    @deanfulford69 7 років тому +95

    Its still a lot of $ in scrap metal

    • @andreasbauer9116
      @andreasbauer9116 7 років тому +25

      Dean Fulford And even more if you sell it as cannonballd

    • @Cragified
      @Cragified 7 років тому +7

      Not where it sits, as he said. The shipping costs kills the profit so it just sits around. You can even find old log liners and such left sitting around because getting them back from the nowhere wasn't worth it, they'd made the money and paid for themselves.
      It's still property owned by someone. If a mine where to open up they'd use the tumbler balls again. Or they get used as ballast in something.

    • @rich1051414
      @rich1051414 7 років тому +3

      It's too bad someone couldn't open a foundry up there specializing in recovering scrap metal, but also having the fallback of processing raw ores from mines. Seems like it could be pretty profitable for a while, and would give a lot of people jobs.

    • @enja001
      @enja001 7 років тому

      Cragified they might still make a profit. It's a high wear restanice manganese steel alloy = $$$

    • @bigredc222
      @bigredc222 7 років тому +2

      Richard Smith
      When it's all said and done, it's still in Alaska, and your customers are thousands of miles away.

  • @mikemarriam
    @mikemarriam 7 років тому +3

    chig, i worked in an iron ore mine where they crushed rock with mills. the sound was deafening. they also had rod mills. each rod weighed 500 lbs. it was really something to be around. even with hearing protection it was loud.

  • @briarmains1482
    @briarmains1482 7 років тому +27

    That would make an awesome driveway material

    • @Ucceah
      @Ucceah 7 років тому +5

      hell yes! but the rust stains everything nearby, if it isnt in a dessert climate.
      i have seen a border around a house graveled with ~1-6" hex nuts. the bottom 4' of the formerly white wall had taken on a "sunburst" look, fading to dark brown and black towards the rust-red bed of nuts.
      rather beautiful, but the stuff of nightmares for any "orderly" neighbourhood.

    • @malicious1111
      @malicious1111 7 років тому +5

      Great now i can park my tank at home without the track breaking the driveway! thx!

  • @NeonRaveHuskey
    @NeonRaveHuskey 7 років тому +1

    as some one who works in a gold mine i knew those were mill balls from the thumb nail. glad you guys didnt try to tell people they were cannon balls.

  • @reelthing4u
    @reelthing4u 7 років тому +15

    i would buy a mill ball , it is a piece of history.

  • @scottvincent1596
    @scottvincent1596 7 років тому

    Ball mills are used in coal fired power plants to pulverize coal into dust to be blown into the furnaces. They are also used in the cement plants to pulverize limestone into dust. As a industrial contractor I see them often.

  • @CJoksch
    @CJoksch 7 років тому +1

    They can be both, sort of. I had a neighbor who worked for a cement company and I also had a (smooth bore) 3" ordnance rifle. We mic'd out a few of those balls used in the cement process and I fired them out of my cannon. Great fun.

  • @octjames2307
    @octjames2307 7 років тому +12

    Steve seems to be the man you want to be with if you want to see the 'real' Alaska. A no-bullsh!t tell it as it is kinda guy..

  • @livefreehobbies4326
    @livefreehobbies4326 4 роки тому +1

    I found one next to a railroad track in a copper mining town in AZ and I was told the same thing. They are crusher balls for breaking up ore for processing.

  • @CAPSLOCKON
    @CAPSLOCKON 7 років тому +1

    great vid chigg, i love little interesting topics like this that keeps the channel fresh.

  • @corvusduluth
    @corvusduluth 7 років тому +1

    In the 'Iron Range' in northern MN those are used in giant tumbler mills for the processing of Iron Ore into pellets (Taconite pellets),

  • @RandomTorok
    @RandomTorok 7 років тому

    I worked for the provincial road maintenance branch at one time, we got a call to an accident where a truck hauling mill balls collided with a truck hauling live fish. It was the middle of the summer and the road was covered in mill balls and dying fish. We just scooped them up with a front end loader and dumped them into a dump truck and hauled the whole works to the dump. Some of the guys were brave enough to take some of the fish home.

  • @rvarelichunters9310
    @rvarelichunters9310 3 роки тому +1

    I use this video often as a reference to many people, who believe they hava a cannonball and I know they don't. Better you let them down then me, i just share the link 🤣 Great video as always!

    • @tashalousdadful
      @tashalousdadful 3 роки тому

      It's obvious most of what's sold on ebay are fakes. One seller in particular puts obvious milling balls next to rulers claiming they're from the Battle of Princeton etc. How are they allowed to get away with this? Crazy!!!

  • @maxmilian294
    @maxmilian294 7 років тому +15

    but the real question is, can you shoot it out of a canon?

    • @buckwheat7424
      @buckwheat7424 4 роки тому

      yes

    • @samlomb2093
      @samlomb2093 4 роки тому +3

      no. As Chigg said many are deformed so they would jam the barrel and turn it into a pipe bomb

    • @darecofreedomfarm3
      @darecofreedomfarm3 4 роки тому +2

      i would shoot em out of mine 1.6" 3 3/8" or 4 1/2" balls would work. I'll buy a few for my mountain howitzer, napoleon gun. or golf ball shooting swivel guns. 4 1/2" steel balls are expensive to make. I could even weld a chain between a couple and fire them out of the howitzer for some real target damage

    • @IratePuffin
      @IratePuffin 4 роки тому +1

      Dareco Freedom Farm can I come play?

  • @johnossendorf9979
    @johnossendorf9979 7 років тому

    In 9th grade we toured a cement factory, all the boys went home with new hard hats and as many steel balls as we cold carry, about 25-30 pounds in my case. The girls had no interest in the free loot. That was in 1984. I still have the hard hat and a few of the steel balls out in the barn.

  • @IratePuffin
    @IratePuffin 4 роки тому +1

    Gives a new meaning to a ball pit.

  • @WeeabooShipPoster
    @WeeabooShipPoster 7 років тому

    this is exactly why they say in my home country "an old man's wisdom is worth more than a million"

  • @jeffhoser7717
    @jeffhoser7717 7 років тому

    As a kid I used to have lbs of iron balls of various sizes from the old Edison Cement works which used one of the first, ( if not the first ) ball mill to pulverize cement rock prior to its being fired in kilns . Today, of course, local cement mills use jaw and rotary crushers for primary sizing and steel balls in the rotary kilns to crush the clinker.

  • @Bohica-tq3ps
    @Bohica-tq3ps 7 років тому

    I worked for a railroad and we would get gondola cars with these things in them. I assumed they were used to tumble something, but I never knew what. Great video, now I know.

  • @Whadaa72
    @Whadaa72 7 років тому

    Steel balls used in rock crusher for mining. I worked on a super fund site above Yankee fork below Stanley Idaho. We repaired the 8 1/2 million gallon water tanks that the Hecla gold mine. We found these balls and sand blasted them. When we were there it was a ghost mine. There was a small crew to help out but it was pretty much deserted.

  • @Riverratskippy
    @Riverratskippy 7 років тому +1

    real cool to know I had heard of ball crushing and wondered what it was now I know. that is why I love this channel man you entertain us and educate people. I hope to find a cannon ball one day.

  • @whowhophoenixaz.2583
    @whowhophoenixaz.2583 7 років тому +1

    It takes a lot of BALLS to make a video like this !!!😎🔮🏉🏈🏀🎳🎱⚽

  • @janetdoten4489
    @janetdoten4489 7 років тому +1

    You always have interesting things, history you share, love it! Thanks!

  • @melissariley9327
    @melissariley9327 2 роки тому

    The chig was amazed by all the BALLS love the channel you have come so far with this channel love u and your friends and your family besafe and besafe love you

  • @antiquegeek
    @antiquegeek 7 років тому +1

    The steel balls used in ball mills for a variety of fine grinding processes are a familiar sight in mining areas. In long term grinding operations you often find that they left the balls in the mills and the balls would wear down smaller and smaller so when a charge of mill balls was dumped you would find them right from original max size for the mill down to tiny. In some ball mills for specialty mineral processing the balls were porcelain/ceramic and I am sure some ebay entrepreneur has re-purposed those as something exotic. As kids, both the steel and the ceramic balls were popular to have when playing marbles. Like ebay they commanded a top price...at least in the economics of 8 year olds so those of us who had found the old ball mills and discarded treasure in balls were kings of the marble economy.

  • @spikeydapikey1483
    @spikeydapikey1483 7 років тому +1

    Wow, they could be so useful for a kick ass sculpture....

  • @Ccccccccccsssssssssss
    @Ccccccccccsssssssssss 3 роки тому

    This channel makes me SO HAPPY!

  • @katelittlewolfwelshrosesan3630
    @katelittlewolfwelshrosesan3630 2 роки тому

    This is my new to channel to learn something new daily! Fascinating! I lived in Alaska for years and never even heard of this! And I did not picture Nome like this, so interesting !

  • @masterdon1521
    @masterdon1521 7 років тому +3

    His buddy Steve sounds like Sylvester Stallone

  • @ruthwalton3457
    @ruthwalton3457 7 років тому

    corrrr never even thought about cannon balls much before just as projectiles in a battle. thanks for sharing 😆

  • @pepeledog
    @pepeledog 7 років тому

    BOY OH BOY! Those rock crushers rolling around with rocks must make one AWESOMELY NOISY PROCESS!!!

  • @dashtothemax5353
    @dashtothemax5353 7 років тому

    I'm flabbergasted looking at all them balls. that's exactly something Tim Gunn would say.

  • @MikeeVee
    @MikeeVee 7 років тому

    another great video, thanks for sharing.

  • @jarhead12181
    @jarhead12181 7 років тому

    "I am just flabbergasted looking at all those balls" - Aquachigger (2017)

  • @michaelfike7542
    @michaelfike7542 7 років тому +13

    just imagine how long it would take you to preserve all them in wax. LOL

    • @silverwheelspatriot1764
      @silverwheelspatriot1764 7 років тому +2

      Michael Fike it takes him all day to do about fifty of shells, could you imagine all those balls only 3"

  • @timetraveller9992
    @timetraveller9992 7 років тому +1

    I love the noise of them rattling together !

  • @briangarrow448
    @briangarrow448 7 років тому

    Built a copper ore crushing ball mill many years ago. I never got a chance to check out the actual balls that were used to crush the ore. Thanks for posting this.

  • @WiIdbiII
    @WiIdbiII 7 років тому

    about 27 years ago I had a guy at an antique shop sell me 4 steel balls that weighed 100 LBS. each ( 10 inch diameter) He tried to tell me a Bullshit story of how they came from a Ranch that was owned by Clint Eastwood and that they were CANNON BALLS used in California. When i told him they were Mill Balls , it busted his dreams of them being Valuable. I wound up giving him 80 dollars for all 4. And they sit in my garden still today.

  • @confuseatronica
    @confuseatronica 7 років тому

    nice, it's like a natural resource. Anyone needs to set up a NEW ball mill I guess could just grab a bunch of those, maybe free maybe give the owner some small $, and just run them in a tumbler till the rust stopped coming off and there u go.
    Nome is set for tumbler balls for the next couple hundred years.

  • @Peter-nz9et
    @Peter-nz9et 6 років тому

    A cannonball for everyone ! Price ofold cannonballs about to drop. Very interesting, Thank you.

  • @MrMcGoo-rm3yu
    @MrMcGoo-rm3yu 7 років тому

    This is a great video, interesting and informative.

  • @sloanchampion85
    @sloanchampion85 7 років тому +3

    I like the Alabama diving flag hat...my father was a Scuba pioneer in the state of Alabama

  • @chernihivske
    @chernihivske 7 років тому

    These alaska videos are GREAT!!!
    Greets, Tom

  • @wygold
    @wygold 7 років тому

    Oh man I haven't been up to Nome in decades. Before George Massey passed away, if you know who he was which I'm sure you do know who he was. I can't wait to see how much gold you brought back down to the lower 48

  • @robertdunn7913
    @robertdunn7913 7 років тому

    I see a lot of comments about how much $ in scrap this would be but in Alaska it usually cost more to get it to the scrap yard than you will get in return.

  • @OutdoorsygalO
    @OutdoorsygalO 7 років тому

    I loved you being "flabberghasted!"

  • @snerper
    @snerper 7 років тому

    That sir, is one hell of a load of balls you're trying to convince us about! :-D

  • @MiltonTucker
    @MiltonTucker 7 років тому

    I believe the term was a ball mill. While those balls were all different size, they probably started life the same. The smaller balls just had more hours of running time on them.

  • @QuestForDetails
    @QuestForDetails 7 років тому +3

    cool! kinda want to weld them into some crazy art thing

  • @lesahanners5057
    @lesahanners5057 7 років тому

    Thanks for the heads up on this, I'll bet it saves some collectors some money.

  • @jublywubly
    @jublywubly 7 років тому

    Interesting stuff. I learned something new. :-)

  • @CatPenny
    @CatPenny 7 років тому +2

    Enjoying watching your trip to AK.

  • @Sir_Leelord
    @Sir_Leelord 7 років тому

    i don't think i'd ever buy a cannonball on ebay after watching this, lol

  • @buckwheat7424
    @buckwheat7424 4 роки тому

    what makes them so good at crushing isn't because they are harder so much as they only have a pin point of contact against flat planes or crystals, pin point has so much more lbs per sq in.

  • @MrGaiden100
    @MrGaiden100 7 років тому +1

    get one of those huge car crane magnets over there! that would look awesome!

  • @therickiestjames3842
    @therickiestjames3842 7 років тому

    'If your name starts with private lay out this pile in rows of ten.'
    The pile lays there to this day

  • @Audioobscure
    @Audioobscure 6 років тому

    it's such a shame that these aren't recycled or reused. but kinda cool that their industrial history is on display in nature like a free museum.

  • @bigidiotdumbstupidguy9329
    @bigidiotdumbstupidguy9329 7 років тому

    Nowadays, I haven't heard of operations using steel (because it sparks) balls for crushers/tumblers. Most sites I've been on and that my dad runs use lead because it's a little softer and it can't spark off of itself.

  • @workwithnature
    @workwithnature 7 років тому

    Wow had me fooled!

  • @EuanTodd
    @EuanTodd 7 років тому

    the best way of checking to see if it is a cannon ball or mill ball through pictures is to check for a line /grove allong it's equator (this is a defect which pretty much all milling balls have due to how they are cast)

  • @shdwbnndbyyt
    @shdwbnndbyyt 7 років тому +1

    The balls do not have to be harder than the rocks, only tougher. Diamond is very hard, but fragile -- breaking along the cleavage planes.
    From wikipedia: Somewhat related to hardness is another mechanical property toughness, which is a material's ability to resist breakage from forceful impact. The toughness of natural diamond has been measured as 7.5-10 MPa·m1/2.[28][29] This value is good compared to other ceramic materials, but poor compared to most engineering materials such as engineering alloys, which
    typically exhibit toughnesses over 100 MPa·m1/2. As with any material, the macroscopic geometry of a diamond contributes to its resistance to breakage. Diamond has a cleavage plane and is therefore more fragile in some orientations than others. Diamond cutters use this attribute to cleave some stones, prior to faceting.[30] "Impact toughness" is one of the main indexes to measure the quality of synthetic industrial diamonds.

  • @Kasey1776
    @Kasey1776 7 років тому

    That's crazy!

  • @Tyblorg
    @Tyblorg 7 років тому

    Wow!! Almost 1 million subs Beau!!!!

  • @IceDaemon
    @IceDaemon 7 років тому

    All you now need is an army of cannons :P

  • @anitagarvey465
    @anitagarvey465 6 років тому +1

    I found one of these 20 years ago on our Sierra foothills property- always wondered what it was. Still think it's cool! We have mines near us.

  • @amyo7745
    @amyo7745 7 років тому +1

    so funny I am watching your so many balls video now.

  • @higg1966
    @higg1966 7 років тому

    He's flabbergasted looking at all those balls.

  • @ChillBill1
    @ChillBill1 7 років тому

    Brilliant!

  • @joelhill4107
    @joelhill4107 7 років тому

    you would be right!! I worked in a gold mill in northern ontario canada years ago, we had a ball mill in the plant. Jaw crusher, cone crusher, ball mill, drum filter, sock press. In that order to extract the miniscule amount of gold within the ore. When the price of gold went down, everything was shut down and sold to share holders for a song! Hopes of some day reopening? Not likely! Just another mine opened on the hopes of prosperity and the only ones that got rich were the geologists that were paid off in the first place to high grade (or selectively choose ore with high amounts of gold per sample) Anybody else lose money on shares with Muscocho Explorations? Magnacon or Magino mines? I'll stop there. Good video

  • @proten40
    @proten40 7 років тому

    My father work for a graphite mine that used a rod and ball mills to process the graphite ore before it was shipped out for refining.

  • @ngneer999
    @ngneer999 7 років тому

    The loudest sound I've ever heard was an empty ball mill running at a cement plant. These mills were about 10 ft. diameter and about a third full of balls. Running without cement powder in them, the balls strike the steel wall of the mill as the whole thing turns about 100 rpm..

    • @enja001
      @enja001 7 років тому

      ngneer999 I would have to agree. with you. the 90mm/3 inch ball are probably the worst

  • @bobmngr
    @bobmngr 7 років тому

    Mill balls. I know where there's tons (literally) of them here in Nevada. Yeah, they come in sizes. These are new, the worn out ones are oddball shaped.

  • @frozentundra52
    @frozentundra52 7 років тому

    Funny on the wobbly balls. Our 3" ball has a tolerance of .080 but normally run .050. Our 1" ball has a tolerance of .040 and normally run .020-.025. I haven't seen balls wobble like he says. 🤔

  • @LarsonFamilyFarm-LLC
    @LarsonFamilyFarm-LLC 7 років тому +2

    point taken...start a Recycling Center in Nome, Alaska

  • @MrNightpwner
    @MrNightpwner 7 років тому

    the things i watch to procrastinate going to the gym

  • @Uniquelyyours1
    @Uniquelyyours1 7 років тому

    Cool vid, Beau.

  • @reedsartofadventure
    @reedsartofadventure 4 роки тому +1

    I got a bunch of all different sizes in my yard that I found out here in the Nevada desert, but I never saw a pile that big.

  • @robindenniston251
    @robindenniston251 7 років тому

    Thats a lot of ball! LOL

  • @mistersmith3986
    @mistersmith3986 7 років тому +1

    DAM! THAT'S A LOT OF BALLS!!!

  • @zumbazumba1
    @zumbazumba1 7 років тому

    Well ,it could be a mountain of cannon balls -you just need to build a cannon !

  • @sparkydoss
    @sparkydoss 7 років тому

    " Oh Ashley.....think of the balls we could have. "

  • @340360mopar
    @340360mopar 7 років тому

    Chigs ball vids are the best.

  • @silverwheelspatriot1764
    @silverwheelspatriot1764 7 років тому +10

    the metal scrapper in me just went nuts..... I'm trying to figure a way to get those to scrap yard...... hmmmmmm

  • @TheKutia
    @TheKutia 7 років тому

    "flabbergasted looking at all those balls"
    Lmfao

  • @hectorthewhimsical4093
    @hectorthewhimsical4093 4 роки тому +2

    When I close my eyes I hear Sam Elliott

  • @faainspector9699
    @faainspector9699 7 років тому

    They are grinding media from a ball mill used at a copper or gold mine............they are cast and are high manganese content so that they work harden the outer surface and stay high abrasive and anti wear........

  • @pychohobo1832
    @pychohobo1832 4 роки тому

    That is the first time I heard of steel balls use in rock crushing.
    Just use a jaw crushed, roll crushed, impact crusher or cone crushed. Steel ball seems expensive and slow to me.
    But hey some People insist to move water up hill

  • @magnus9296
    @magnus9296 7 років тому +1

    I work at a mine. We go through thousands of these a week in our mills.

  • @diicctater
    @diicctater 7 років тому

    "Who knows what's in there.... maybe it's paved with cannonballs!"

  • @LordofTreasure
    @LordofTreasure 7 років тому

    What the Hell 👍 very Nice Find🙂 awesome👌
    Greetings

  • @carwashvnvmc
    @carwashvnvmc 6 років тому

    In the 60's down in So. Calif. we would walk the train tracks looking for 'cannon balls'. Of course they were only weights used to hold down the coverings on the train loads but it was an adventure to us kids.

    • @carwashvnvmc
      @carwashvnvmc 6 років тому

      Ebay is 'loaded' with them...LOL

  • @randlerichardson5826
    @randlerichardson5826 6 років тому

    Wow that whole pile is tumbling balls??? Dang that’s a lot of them

  • @mindofmadness5593
    @mindofmadness5593 6 років тому

    Wish I could find some of those in a pile. I'd reuse them for their original intent on a smaller scale. Also wish i could find lots of Aluminum and lead as I do metal casting-all those lead chunks and weights you find? They'd be melted down into Ingots for future projects.

  • @SaintMarneusCalgar
    @SaintMarneusCalgar 7 років тому

    I want them in my garden it looks amazing^^

  • @rolleric68
    @rolleric68 7 років тому

    you guys were so cool doing this shotgun video amung a hole bunch of other videos your grate

  • @sr.chinta-louisetorpey5566
    @sr.chinta-louisetorpey5566 4 роки тому

    Wow, I never knew this...how interesting

  • @smde1
    @smde1 7 років тому

    Balls from a ball mill. Used to pulverise ore for processing.