Using calluses to strop the bit - that's next level Nice work in the sunshine - it's interesting to see the longevity in the bits in different materials. Your videos give me the inspiration to carry on using my Prandi Yankee pattern instead of picking up a silky. Thank you very much for sharing
Cheers mate. Yeah you can see some of the damage lines in the cut wood. All these axes are around 20° with a micro, which is a usually a reliable compromise but all copped it a bit on this wood. Stick with the Prandi! 🪓🪓👍
Heck yeah Kurt !!! Killer job man man, accuracy on point, perfectly clean notches… dude I aspire to chop like you every time I get out there you’re an absolute beast behind the axe !!! Great job dude beautiful axes too !! I really love the sounds they’re so crisp the quality is amazing and really dig the nature sounds too man sounds like you’re deep in there !! I’m going to watch again, once wasn’t enough !! Congrats on 1k !!
Excellent vid.... Very inspirational and educational. Always looking forward to your next posts..... You my Friend are at the Top of your craft. Godspeed and safety to you and your family. Much Respect from St Petersburg Florida U.S.A.
Cheers Joey, yeah was pretty dense stuff. It's even worse when it's seasoned! Made a few handles out of some a few years back, gotta keep the tools sharp.👍🪓
Gday mate, cheers! Yep she's pretty warm down here at the moment. I shot this two months ago at the start of summer , was about 33°C, it's still the same now but with extra humidity🥵🤣
Very nice work. Like that you had more than one see to you only had to sharpen when you started, then just switch them out when you dulled them up from all that work. Be blessed.
Looks like there's a range of swells there. A quick look I think the green tassie might have my favorite handle swell. Crazy that they all got edge damage. Just shows this ain't Basswood lol.
Yeah the Green Tassie and the Lamaca are fairly similar, as is the tui camp axe. Handle familiarity definitely goes a long way towards repeatable accuracy 👍👍🪓
Yeah good job. Interesting log of wood. Straight, long and no branches. Respect to the little grubs that bored a few holes here and there. Wonder what a white mahogany ax handle would be like.
I love the handle on it. Regardless how long between uses it always feels familiar. It spins me out for such a skinny axe, really does well on sub-10inch stuff👍🪓
Next level paw strop there chief! Damn that’s cool, a little dirt and spent grit from the stone probably bring it right up, if your coconuts hang that low! Top of your craft mate, truly inspiring chopping and cinema. I’ve got a good size gum (euc we call em in Nor Cal) removal job on the roster coming up soon, gonna be a handful of cords and a couple nice 30” dbh pipes I’ll mill on site. Supa stoked to practice some chopping, just got my first couple decent tassie heads in the mail. Gotta get ‘em strung up on some tasty hafts, nobody sells those style handles here, and I’m not much one for ordering wood online. Hafta see what I can slowly whittle up. Hope da ert sky and tree be treating you well amigo. Big up
Gday Ian, cheers for watchin mate. Good luck with the eucs! As for handles, I know a couple mates in the States have used House Handles on tassies. I love the US hickory, Aussie made EFA handles but I'd say they'd be pricey to get over there. There's some other Aussie makers that would ship to the US if your interested. Same to you mate, cheers👍👍🪓
He's back!!🤙🤙 sweet video as always bro that white mahogany looked like some hard wood that's for sure awesome grain though. Nice to see the Lamaca performed well. Keep them coming mate👍👍
Cheers mate! I fell behind a bit but hoping to get some more vids up soon (ish 🤣). Loving the Swiss Champ review, did you end up grabbing the fixed blade?
Finally got my Agdor 2.5lb Montreal Pattern reprofiled and its a chopper. Took me 3.5 hours to hand file to 20 degrees but worth it. HB is definitely hard metal.
Nice clip, as always. Love all the cut aways 👍🏻). Good to see that little Brades Criterion boys axe in action. I think I’ve got the same one (365?), but it’s got a very squared off profile (classic Dayton) and never seems to bite well in harder timber. Maybe I need to give it more of a curve. Not giving up on it!
Thanks mate. This one's a 363 2.25lb, and I've got a 365 in 2.75lb. This smaller ones had a little bit of toe wear so is fairly rounded off, more so than my 365. Great steel in these Brades, well worth the effort to tune up!🪓🪓👍
Just Perfect Kurt !!!! I really needed that ! 33 + a buck off .THATS A LOT OF WORK !!! Is your Plumb tassie fairly flat bladed? My 2 are. The CRAFTSMAN really showed off what a good tassie does. Thinking about using one of my CRAFTSMANs in the morning. What grit is the stone you used on the Brades Half axe. Looks like it puts up a really nice edge !
Gday Glen, cheers mate. The Plumb is fairly flat. It does have a centreline but not as distinct as the Craftsman. That little stone is just an old one found at an antique store. I'd guess it's about 400/1000. 👍👍🪓
hey mate love the camera work and video production very soothing.. I'm just getting into felling axes and got a Husqvarna forest axe but it is far too small at 65cm and too light. What would you recommend for a beginner and affordable axe in the $150 aud mark. I know I need something a lot heavier possibly the 1.2kg hultafors. Thanks mate keep up the great work
@@adamtomlin2781 gday mate cheers for watching, yep for 150 for a new, complete axe I'd recommend the 1.2 Hultafors, good value and one of the best allrounders on the market. I'd file the edge to around 20 degrees and thin the handle a bit. The little Husky can do some work for a small axe but the 1.2 or 1.5 are a fair step up in performance 👍🪓🪓🇦🇺
@@kurts64 thanks mate been meaning to comment for a few videos now you’ve got some serious fitness/ability I’m hoping to buck some 100-150mm timber into more manageable pieces for firewood whilst we roadtrip for a bit of fitness and fun in stead of using a chainsaw. i’ve already bought a few whetstones and have a file so I’ll look into the 1.2 or 1.5. Cheers from WA aus mate
i'm a bit late on the scene but i have a keech Timberman 23 axe head, would you know what they are worth? it still has the silver patina, not sure if its been used, i've had it for about 10years wrapped up.
@@SteveSmith-zz4ih gday mate, wow that's a nice find! Great axe, I love mine but to buy another is getting pretty exxy. They're a pretty sought after head these days, if your keen on selling I'd suggest the Australian Axe Forum group on Facebook, but if your after a user axe for yourself, then there's not many better than a KC23! Great score. Cheers mate! 👍🪓🇦🇺
@@kurts64 Thanks Kurt, i will check out the FB forum.i have too many axes about 35, usual suspects and a few broad, double headers, a couple of blacksmith (unbranded) axes and a "True Temper Bell" which was used by Linesman putting through Power in the USA. It has a long longer handle.
@@devinmoran59 gday mate, the green hytest, the lamaca and the tui see the most use out of this lot. The lamaca is nice for processing smaller trees but lacks in splitting, the tui swings nice and spits chips well but can be a bit thick, the Hytest is a happy medium between the two. Cheers for watching! 👍 🪓🪓