Yeah but sometimes the sugar makes it taste a bit too sweet and if it nelts too much it annoys me. I sometimes drink the glass by itself with sugar but only a few teaspoons
DM “What?” Person 1 “never mind. Just let me do it” *rolls d20 for accuracy and gets a nat 20* NAT 20 BABY! *throws the metal D6 directly in the spot above the DM’s left eye at full force*
Theres this mf called Tufflips STEALING YOUR CONTENT. I would report him as I know damn well not everything on youtube is cc/redistributable, he just says "edited for fair use" with ZERO EDITS; (rather just a reordering of the clip) (and zero understanding of what fair use is) He also deletes comments saying as much on his channel. I would have (and you can, please do) reported him for copyright abuse but I don't own your content so there's not much I can do. Love your channel btw. Been watching since the 2nd yt short. Edit: it seems the reposter has been taken down, after looking for his channel again I can no longer find it, WOOO!
@@VickV945L for the thief stealing content for views rather than making their own content. A snitch is someone doing something illegal and then telling on other people when they get caught for a lighter sentence. Big difference and some of ya'll throw these words around too easily. So gangsta 😂 but probably the first to tell on other people when you get caught for something
@@MakarovSergey39basically it removes impurities and promote good flow which is why you see the dice he casted was excellent another reason is the impurities that the melted glass collects turn into slag which he would hammer to remove the black stuff you see come out
This is so cool. I've always wanted to learn to make the molds, and cast nifty things like this. Would like to learn how to forge and work steel. Specifically blade making. Good video man. Really enjoyed it
I don’t know why but glowing bright orange is such a color that I really wanna touch or drink. Like if there’s a bucket of molten lava next to me I’m gonna be tempted to stick a hand in it drink it.
Sir, these rotating bands are from fired rounds/shells as can be seen by the engraving (the diagonal slashes) from the rifling. Where the metal smith aquired them from, I can't speculate, but having worked muntions disposal as active duty and then as a civilian, I saw many rotating bands in impact areas and on firing ranges. Some were still attached to dud or inert rounds and some that were laying about after the round had functioned/detonated. In my experience, outdated or damaged rounds were disposed of by trained personnel, such as EOD or Ammunition Technicians usually by detonation at disposal ranges. I can’t speak to current disposal practices.@@user-di6in1us1l
@user-di6in1us1l The ones you see are from fired shells. The rifling of the barrel forms those ridges and valleys. The shells were likely found on a range and the rotating bands chiseled off for the scrap price or other use. That's sad, because a lot of collectors would pay good money for the complete shell, regardless of condition.
Sweet! That Jason mask is just missing the mouth holes however. Oh and speaking of brutal death dealers. You must have the "gold crown" scene from GoT forever forged in your mind..I know watching this takes me back to that. 😱😱😱
The white stuff is borax. It's a type of flux that glasses over the melt to prevent oxidation. The glass is added because it is sticky and binds to impurities in the metal and it floats. It is then skimmed off the top before the pour.