Not his craftmen ship. This guy reuploaded a video from @knivesproject3349 I highly doubt he has 2 channels unlinked, and the shop on the rest of this channels videos are completly different than what is shown here. This man stole a video and got anywhere from $2k to $15k. At the 0:52 second mark you can even see the knives project hat lmao.
He was standing directly in front of it, I was waiting for that blade to let go! Not to mention it sounded like it was spinning around 30,000 rpm😱 Fine craftsman though😁
Мужик. Ты мастер! Весь ролик смотрел и чувствовал что-то родное советское, но глазу было не за что зацепиться. Пока ты не начал резать бумагу, а там все по-русски. Хотя автоматы на стене дали подсказку - наш человек! В любом случае - работа отличная при минимуме оборудования. Но береги пальцы - пила просто смерть.
Gotta love how people just give this guy crap for not having 'OSHA' rated tools/environment/SOPs instead of appreciating and noticing how he put together and built the various tools he uses. Damn, the guy obviously works with what he's got and does damn well.
I don't have much money, I make my own tools, doesn't mean I can't follow basic saftey protocol. Glasses, respirator, welding mask. Not expensive to buy, literally save you your eyes and lungs, pretty big deal.
I'm not always a big fan of regulations, but commonsense tells you ( in my case very personal experience) Constant use breeds familiarity, and familiarity loses respect. And if you get careless with that 14" open saw blade, all it takes is to stumble and fall onto that thing and your gutted stem to stern. Best case scenerio lose a few fingers or hand. Saw cuts hurt a lot ! LOL So do eye injuries. I know.
Very good point. If he gets injured, i bet he's not the type of guy, trying to blame others for his mistakes...If people mind their own business, the world would be a better place.
You have my utmost respect and admiration, Sir...very encouraged to see that there are craftsmen/artists still on God's green Earth! Thanks so much for sharing your craft and talent so a world that thinks it's better to "code" than use good old fashioned hard work and having a love our vocations!
Why do you express such disrespectful behaviour towards those whose vocation includes coding/programming, Russ? It makes you seem a deeply hypocritical Luddite given the following: (1) Those people who code are responsible for this video being so easily shared and seen. (2) They are likewise unfortunately responsible for your ability to make such a shameful comment. (3) For someone who claims to value craft and talent and passion and creative works, your disdain for computer programming betrays an ignorance, an insincerity, and a lack of solidarity; such ingenuity and effort is no less valuable than others. Fun Fact: coders are hugely responsible for creations and events as momentous as the international space station and LANDING ON THE MOON. (That's the moon in Earth's sky, Russ! The one you can look up at each night!) Not to mention the myriad of other modern conveniences that it would appear you take for granted and believe fell from the sky fully-formed without anyone putting in time and thought and love to their work! Have a little more damned respect for ALL labour, Russ.
I cannot believe the accuracy of that disc grinder work! I would have to use a large belt sander to keep it that consistent! I learned a lot by watching the pins being inserted & tightened up! Keep up the Great Work!
I do it the same way. You can work very accurate with the grinder, because you can see what you're doing. At the beltgrinder you always have to turn the knive and check.
I cant be the only one that got a little concerned when he fired up that huge blade to cut the wood for the handle. this guy has amazing and talent no fear.
Your not...I had a WTF moment too as he approached a free wheeling circular saw with no table! I've cut the end of my left index finger off on a table saw...still makes the hair on the back of neck stand up just thinking about it!
Dude, my stomach turned when I saw how close his fingers got to that blade!! I've witnessed a very bad saw accident when I was younger and it hasn't left me yet.
Класс.. Если бы не одно "но" - сталь сверел HSS , быстрорез по нашему, не сваривается кузнечной сваркой с флюсом, бурой/бораксом. Значит, сверла не те, не правильные. 🙄😊
This guy reuploaded a video from @knivesproject3349 I highly doubt he has 2 channels unlinked, and the shop on the rest of this channels videos are completly different than what is shown here. This man stole a video and got anywhere from $2k to $15k. At the 0:52 second mark you can even see the knives project hat lmao.
Good lord that saw terrifies me. I’m a blacksmith and I can freely admit there is no way i would even go near that thing. 😳 that thing would be the death of me. Lovely work sir I very much like your style. My grandfather lost a finger to a table saw, what I learned from that, respect your saw or you’ll be blessed to just lose a finger
Всегда смотрю с удовольствием работу кузнеца. Вот интересно, сейчас так много технических средств в помощь в таком тяжёлом труде: и пневмомолоты, и гриндеры, и шлифмашинки, абразивные ленты, отрезные круги, газовые тигели, всё есть. А как раньше в старину умудрялись ковать оружие и доспехи. А многие дошедшие до наших дней доспехи являются просто произведением искусства. Удивительно.
Только тогда в этих сварках и сложениях пакета была нужда, потому что сталь была очень дорогой, а сегодня это баловство - проще и лучше сделать нож, отслесарив одну полосу и закалить снизу, он будет дешевле и лучше.
@@ToborGun Начнем с того, что сейчас кузнец берет сортовую сталь с известными свойствами, а тогда ее выплавляли на месте в кустарной домне из лимонита.
@@user-usb3ck4iz7k не совсем понял чем это противоречит моему ответу. Ну да ладно. Если что, отвечал я не на ваши комменты, а на тот, с которого ветка начата.
Nice ! a lot of work ! He is careful, but yes, I would wear safety glasses....you only have two eyes, and all it takes is one little thing for a lifetime of regrets! Is the handle hardwood ? If not, I would definitely use some.... If he sells those, I bet he does not get as much as he should, so labor intensive !
This incredibly skilled craftsman has done more than just create a knife. He created an extraordinary masterpiece, an heirloom, signed with his sweat and soul... Bravo!
Okay I have a noob question as someone with 0% blacksmith skills: What is the white powdery stuff you keep putting on the heated iron? Very satisfying ending 👍👍
WOW! If I had that talent I'd be making knives but never selling them! They are truly one of a kind. It has to hurt seeing them leave. The best to you always....
I guess the good smith as any artisan only hurts when his/her unique work end up in the hands of a spoiled kid or any kind of jerk that not value the soul given to the thing beeing carried through the door and use it recklessly. I will never forget the growing lessons i had at once in that exact moment when an old friend and former master gave me a graduation gift, saying that "his work was done, but my learning should never end". I care for that symbolic object until now as part of me and, as if it was magic, just for having it i learned all the mumbojumbo that fella said me about respect, honor and wisdom. That is the spirit i used to try to craft in my own shit, being it working or just in a hobbie, and despite can't consider myself a craftsman, the feel i described is what i felt when i, by example, cook something special to eat.
He's getting better at this, he won't have any problems with this blade, he forged it properly with no cold shuts this time. And the finished blade looks great! Next time he welds drill bits together perhaps he will give them a few twists before he hammers the blade out, it will give a much nicer Damascus look to it when he dips the blade in ferric chloride . This is an appealing knife, he could become a local bladesmith if he keeps this up! Great work!
may be. if he can survive. especialy with circullar saw onto grinder. without proper air ventilation. without breath protection. with tools that can`t provide enough power that can overheating and fireing up smth (wood belt grinder upside down, dremel? for drilling??? srly, drilling with 10k RPM?????)
@TearsOnAWind Drilling with 10k RPM is actually ok sometimes. But not this time. For reference: If you drill in mild steel with a 2mm carbide drill bit in a CNC-machine you want a cutting speed (vc) of about 300m/minute. Let's calculate RPM (300×1000)÷(2×pi)≈ 47 750 RPM. Not many machines can rev that fast but that's optimal cutting speed.
@@morilot bro, he drilling wood by his hand not a CNC. for that needed 1200-1800RPM. besides why it cant be done at the same time on drilling press with knife and wood handles?
The only point I would tell you is that a lot of sharp material is exposed at the beginning of the hilt, and if you were to try to stab anything, you could injure yourself. It would have been ideal to put a guard on it.
I knew someone who lost an eye working without safety glasses. I’m glad I was wearing *mine* a few times when “stuff happened.” There was a brief period where I was not able to get the usual, *expensive* glasses I’d gotten into the habit of wearing during my Boeing days (the only difference between the shop pair and what I regularly wore then were the permanent side shields on the shop pair, and the removable ones for the usual wear glasses.) I see the scar from that time every time I look in the mirror. I fell while crossing Beaverton-Hillsdale highway a bit less than twenty years ago to collect that one. The frames cut my cheek just under my left eye. No more cheap non-safety glasses. *I want to keep what vision I have.*
Everyone commenting about the wood saw still didn't prepare me for what I witnessed at 15:30 lmao but if that's how he does it that's his business. Super awesome result!
Thank you for popping this up on the internet !! Sooooo cool to see a MAN make something Bravo ! hey, i could have watched another half hour lol that was excellent
Kolay gelsin ustam videolarını beğenerek takip ediyorum bıçağı karartmak için demir sülfat mı kullanıyorsun ve nerden tedarik ediyorsunuz teşekkür ederim
Вы великий кузнец! Вы умеете сваривать быстрорежущую сталь просто с бурой не используя контейнер! Вы умеете сверлить быстрорежущую сталь сверлом из быстрорежущей стали! Вы умеете сделать так, что быстрорежущая сталь не намагнитилась от магнитного держака! Гефест вам даже в подмётки не годится! Это было прекрасно! Браво!
Потрачена ума времени и сил для изготовления ножа который ТОЛЬКО НА СТЕНУ ПОВЕСИТЬ? Он сломается если его метнуть в деревянную колоду ! Зачем все эти пляски если нож дерьмо?
It's a great looking blade & the working together of the hard tool steel drills looks sweet. The only things that bug me are the choices to drill a bloody big hole through the middle of it & to have such a massively thick handle. It's a knife, not a chisel or screwdriver. You don't need so much extra weight in the handle throwing off the balance.
In junior high metal shop, we were allowed to forge knives, and we used files to make them. Once annealed they made very tough blades that would hold an edge for a long time.
File steels make the finest knives, much better than this one. I think you meant to say 'hardened and tempered' instead of annealed. Annealing is a softening process.
Great video, I really like those shots of the Borax melting.... 👍 I'm curious about those sparks off the billet when you pulled it out of the forge at 7:00 minutes, is the billet too hot?...those sparks are the actual carbon molecules being too hot and shooting out?....or is that a good welding temp for the billet?
Looks like a good welding heat to me. Some carbon on the surface is burning but that's normal. The decarbonized layer on the surface is not very deep and will be ground away.
Əlinə sağliq usta. Р18, р6м5 bunlar surət poladlaridı tərkibində bolca wolfram, vannadyum olduğu ükun döyülməsi, normalizasyonu sərtləşməsi və temperlemesi yüksək dərəgələrdə olmalıdir. Hər şeyi duzgun olduğu təqdirdə mükəmməl aşınma dirəngi əldə edilir.
@@cavidceferov9016 Borax bizdə bur deyilir. Metalin bir birinə yapismasina əngəl olan zibili ,tozu , oksigeni aradan qaldiraraq ocaq qaynağıini təmin edir .
Im pure amateur, not involved in forging but i like observe the process of making sth amazing by skilled hands from almost nothing Question - why, what is the purpose to use diesel bath before?
Reading some of these comments are hilarious, shows how little some people know. Grandfather had a shop full of machines like this, all homemade because they either weren’t available on the market or money was short. This was in the 30’s and 40’s for me, most of the equipment was made in the 20’s. One learned respect for machines because the danger was obvious, and yes we both had our eyes and fingers...People today are too damm soft.
I work in an industrial area that has a pile of old dull #21, 10 and .25 drill bits. So, it's possible if he got them from a machine shop or place that uses the same size on a daily basis.