Hey guys, this is Slava. My friend has cancer and I made Blades of Chaos from God of War to fundraise for him. Please, check out this video: ruclips.net/video/Jzwod1WRFNw/видео.html Thank you
I love this video. The craftsmanship in the axe, the techniques used and explained, even down to the music. Brilliant to use Jazz. It could have been something else, of which someone has an objection too. The end result was beautiful.
There comes a time in making a beautiful object which will stay beautiful for many years, when the maker realised that,- and at that point the responsibility (‘don’t ruin it now!’) goes sky high! The real skill after that is to be able to continue to the end!
its always funny seeing what other countries call different tools felting disc - grinding disc petal circle - linishing or flap disc awesome result at the end though, almost inspired to make my own
You saw the tools... But I'll run down a list of the basic things you need to get started. Number 1 is and always will be a vice and a stable platform to hold it. Angle grinder for heavy cutting work. Grinding disks, more disks and more disks (this will be a pattern for all abrasive cutting tools, they wear out fast). Metal files. Sandpaper, sandpaper, and more sandpaper. Water bucket to cool off the steel so it doesn't change its crystalline microstructure. Saw. Knife. That's it. You can do everything he did in this video minus the etching with those few tools. To make things easier you can add a scroll saw, a bench grinder, a 1"-3" belt grinder, grinding belts, more grinding belts, milling machine, CNC etching machine, battery or acid to etch with, chisels, dremel tool, dremel bits, more dremel bits, leather punch, leather stitching supplies (sheath), kydex, kydex press, boiled linseed oil, tung oil, polyurethane, cerakote, forge, blacksmith's hammer, anvil, power hammer..... That's all I can think of right now lol.
@@isaac.3347 you’re not too stupid lacking experience would be closer to right. With a little determination and patience you’ll find your mind and hands are very capable. If your not familiar with certain tools or techniques do a little research. There’s tons of instructional videos on an endless amount of skills. No ones a pro from day one. If you start a project and the end result isn’t perfection that not a problem. You learned what came fairly easy and what was tough for you. Research and practice the things that gave you trouble and you will get better at it. Practice on something that is scrap then you can’t mess up and won’t be so worried about ruining the piece. Patience persistence and practice builds confidence. That’s the key! Have fun! When it pisses you off take a break. Oh yea this goes without sayin but Safety first. One skill at a time and before long you’ll look down and realize damn that looks pretty damn good! Don’t doubt yourself my friend if you really want to learn and can find the time it’ll happen. Promise! Blessed be!
I`ve done this ! lol wish I`d had your tools , did mine on an old sears bench grinder and 1x42 inch belt sander ! turned out pretty good . of course I did`nt do the etching , no equipment for it ! you do nice work
@@danielmunro6426 can’t use a smart charger, but the cheap ones that are basically a power supply with a 12v/6v and amperage selection toggle switch work well.
really amazing work. I have one critique. Do your texts in yellow. I'm a video guy and I found myself having to rewind because the text got swallowed by the background. In yellow they won't do that. Just a suggestion.
Lol, no it's not. Jawed Karim said it was because he couldn't easily find videos of Janet Jacksons breasts being exposed in the 2004 superbowl. Chad Hurley and Steve Chen said they originally wanted to make a video dating service, and they posted ads on craigslist where they'd pay hot women $100 to post videos of themselves, but when they couldn't get enough women, they decided to allow any videos. I was on early youtube, we mostly used it for the first memes, and pirating TV shows.
Thank you so much in the past I build an itching machine and was into metal and wood craft now that I'm on farm land bush your work and skills has reignited that passion to start doing this as a side income and hobby keep up the amazing craft.
Beautiful work, just a word of caution with using salt water for the etching process, along with the hydrogen and oxygen bubbles your also producing chlorine gas. Keep up the great work!
Great how to video! The subtitles were a little hard to read but other than that it was awesome! What a beautiful ax! Absolutely LOVED the mucus you used!!
@@tomatoman3706 I should mention my previous comment is just a hunch, and not fact in any shape or form. I could definitely be wrong. I am only going off the _extremely limited_ information I have from watching different blacksmiths work. I'm probably the furthest thing one, as much as I find it fascinating. The biggest concern I have is definitely the handle just because you do not want a faulty handle when using an axe. That part of the comment is from experience lol
Really cool, but I agree with those saying that the handle isn't ... handy. Maybe coat it with epoxy to display the pattern but make it smooth to hold?
Dude that's pretty damn cool!! Just wondering about the temper on the blade.. it seemed pretty soft when you were filing it, maybe worth doing a heat treat
Instead of etching it with salt and DC, you could have done with way faster with the process I use : Acid. make a mix of 30% of hydrogen peroxide and the rest of chlorydric acid (the one you find at the drug store, should be at around 30% concentration, no need to find conentrated one). Keep your paint masking process and just put it into the mix. You'll see it's way quicker and could also be way deeper. One good thing also : you can make the contour or you etching zone with wax (like the one around some cheeses), this way you don't have to immerge the whole piece, just create a "pool" around the zone anf fill it up with your mix. once you're done, use a sringe to remove the acid and simply rinse it with a solution of baking soda, it's a pH stabilizer (around 7), it will neutralise the acid and stop the etching.
Hah! I beat you! I'd certainly be able to also remove the original handle with a saw. Would, must admit in order to avoid being _too_ arrogant, take me way more than it did in the video, but indeed I could! ;-)
A few years back, a young lady I knew was being physically threatened, she mentioned her intention of buying a knife for defence. Why? I asked. Because she knew the person threatening her carried one. For reasons to complex to go into here, I agreed that a weapon would be appropriate, and we were talking about what would work. Suddenly I remembered that the lady was not only Native American, but that within her culture lay the perfect solution. A tomahawk. 8 hours of carefully scooping out dead weight and reshaping the head of a hickory handle shingling axe on clearance at Lowe’s produced an extremely light, but blade heavy weapon that in use was a joy to use. Unknowingly, something in the reshaped head made the blade, while at 90 degrees to the handle, feel as though it thrust into the target like the point of a small sword. To be honest it didn’t look like much, I didn’t have time to make it pretty, but when the final test, just a casual swing into a pork shoulder saw the blade penetrate 5” through tough skin and nick the bone in the center.... Change of plans honey. Remember earlier I said hit the asshole once in the upper body and run? She nodded. Well that’s gonna kill him, self defence or not you do not need that grief. I spent an hour teaching her how to fake high and chop into the outside of his quad, and break into a run in one motion. Three days later, he stalked her, the little ax was drawn cleanly from inside her long skirt. She said he laughed at it and lunged. She said she felt punch through his jeans then crunch when it hit bone, felt things rip as she yanked it out of his thigh, heard him shriek weirdly like wind through power lines, and she never looked back for a hundred feet. She turned. He was on the ground and not moving. Who knows what he told the ambulance or the cops, but my friend was never bothered. A tomahawk is not so different from Ragnar’s axe, and I know first hand what a devastating weapon it can be.
Great video, i do have a potential recommendation however. Whenever you go to use the electricity, use two seperate pieces of metal instead of one bent piece. The main path for current is just going through the metal and not through the salt water. Just a recommendation.
Hi, I would like to know what kind of painture was the blue one and what was inside of the salt solution?? I am trying to make the same as you following this video. It looks amazing.
Don't know about the paint (probably just normal spraypaint; it's there as a resist to protect the parts you don't want to etch, and spraypaint'll do the job fine), but the salt solution for the etching looks like a pretty standard mix. Water and salt, that's all. Get a container of warm water (warm water helps dissolve the salt) and pour in some salt. You don't need to be precise about measuring, just get it so that it's saturated/cloudy. Maybe... 1/8th to 1/6th of a cup of salt for each cup of water? If you want something a bit more aggressive, use vinegar instead of water. Just as a safety note, do it in a well-ventilated area, particuarly if you're using vinegar. The process creates nasty gas. Chlorine, IIRC. Small amounts, but not fun to expose your eyes to. Smells bad, too. Be sure to rinse your etched metal well afterwards to remove any leftover solution, or it'll rust quickly. I wouldn't suggest using a welding power supply, partly for safety, partly because it might be too aggressive. On small areas or things like letter and numbers, you can use a 9v battery for power. For larger areas, I find a 12v car battery charger does the job just fine.
@@Cascadejackal u seem to know what ur doing sir I have a question about the position of the clamps. In the video he had both clamps attached to the same piece of metal & I'm told that will blow out the fuse instantly. My dad said I should attach one clamp to the metal sheet & the other to the wire the axe is hanging on. I wanted to hear ur thoughts bc it sounds like u know a thing or two.
@@tanner2937 Positive clamp to the metal you want to etch or the wire it's hanging from, Negative clamp to the metal sheet. Remember, Positive current flows towards Negative, taking some of the exposed metal with it. That's how etching, and electricity in general, works. + >>>>>>> -
I know its meant as decoration, but practical side of me is tortured by ruined temper on the edge. I have done similar builds with old rusted axe heads but try to use trown away ones and keep the heat out of the blade by cooling it. You can even weld them, long as you keep the blade cooled. There is also some temper on the back side as its usually used as hammer. None of my work probably ends up used ever again, but i like to preserve its utility use how ever much i can.
I was curious how you'd solve the problem of the axe being way to thick for a Viking axe, on account that grinding it down would likely spoil the temper of the toolsteel. But 3 minutes in, seeing you handfile makes me realize you do not plan to make this a Viking axe but just a decorated Hand axe. Oh well... At least a warning about not overheating of the steel when grinding would have been prudent. If the goal wasn't a Viking axe but a tool axe, then preserving the hardness would be advised.
I bet you burn through files with the goin back and fourth l, they’re made to be ran in one direction. Don’t worry I learned this recently and that’s the only reason I’m tellin you lmao!!
Thanks for the ideas working on my 1st one hopefully I will be done by Christmas (is a present for my nephew). If it comes out half as nice as yours I will be happy.
Interesting build, I have one point of contention though. 2:50 when you're doing the file work; you should be only doing one direction with your file. By pulling back with in contact. your only prematurely wearing out your file.
@@diterpunkt4426 And you obviously don't know how they're made. files are like a table saw blade, made to cut one direction. By pulling the file back across the metal you flatten the teeth and dull the file.
Nice skills! My only suggestion would be to make a simpler handle because a handle like that is not useable for actual work - and an axe handle that looks like that is only going to hang on a wall. The best axes in my opinion are ones that look great but also function great.
Some people use ordinary latex household paint. It's fairly water resistant and acid resistant. You can use the stuff intended for tools and outdoor furniture too. Do what he did, experiment with what you have!
Hey guys, this is Slava. My friend has cancer and I made Blades of Chaos from God of War to fundraise for him. Please, check out this video: ruclips.net/video/Jzwod1WRFNw/видео.html
Thank you
Very well done, and for a good cause. Love it!
The music is fucking rap bullshit man? Should have gone with traditional Viking music. Video is unwatchable with music turned on.
WOW! That’s beautiful!!!!!
Getaway Dreamer
Go. Away.
That is really nice 👍
"13 minutes?! who's got the time..." 13 minutes later... Let's watch another one!
Great work man!!!
Amigo ..me puede decir si ocupar la soldadora es factible y cuanto amperaje sera bueno
@@motorossilva8667j l MnmlEWI
We
Good deep etching, car battery chargers work real good, and white vinegar instead of water better.
I was wondering if I could use my battery charger.
How do you do the etching mate. Ive never done it before but would love to have a go at making a pair of these for hanging on the wall.
So did he just use a stick welder with a rag dipped in salty water and run it over the axe head? That was enough to etch it that deep?
@@billysaunders544 yes
@@RuLaKeLP thanks very much, I tried it, it worked, I also I bought a battery charger and it worked better
I didn't expect the etching to be as deep as it turned out. Very cool.
Like how the art wraps around the back of the head.
Now this is what I like, no talking, just music and machining.
I love this video. The craftsmanship in the axe, the techniques used and explained, even down to the music. Brilliant to use Jazz. It could have been something else, of which someone has an objection too. The end result was beautiful.
There comes a time in making a beautiful object which will stay beautiful for many years, when the maker realised that,- and at that point the responsibility (‘don’t ruin it now!’) goes sky high! The real skill after that is to be able to continue to the end!
Kratos: boy, come have a look at this
He is going to be testing that on Zeus
I could like literally hear his voice when i read this.
I mean will someone pleaseee come and take a look at this!
Smooth jazz and the voice of Flex is awesome together! Thanks for the axe!
2:35 NEVER fail to secure an item into the vice when using an angle grinder!!!
Literally. It's also important to keep the wheel straight. I learned that the hard way when pieces of the wheel were shooting everywhere
I think that's brilliant you're bringing a lot af skills to this.
check out my ax
That was oddly satisfying to watch lol.
Oddly?
Really like watching you explore options of etching. Nicely done
its always funny seeing what other countries call different tools
felting disc - grinding disc
petal circle - linishing or flap disc
awesome result at the end though, almost inspired to make my own
I think that should have been 'fettling' disc.
Great vid and show of craftmanship - how about doing a vid on Tools to do stuff like this (maybe much more simplistic for beginners) - stay safe
You saw the tools... But I'll run down a list of the basic things you need to get started.
Number 1 is and always will be a vice and a stable platform to hold it. Angle grinder for heavy cutting work. Grinding disks, more disks and more disks (this will be a pattern for all abrasive cutting tools, they wear out fast). Metal files. Sandpaper, sandpaper, and more sandpaper. Water bucket to cool off the steel so it doesn't change its crystalline microstructure. Saw. Knife.
That's it. You can do everything he did in this video minus the etching with those few tools. To make things easier you can add a scroll saw, a bench grinder, a 1"-3" belt grinder, grinding belts, more grinding belts, milling machine, CNC etching machine, battery or acid to etch with, chisels, dremel tool, dremel bits, more dremel bits, leather punch, leather stitching supplies (sheath), kydex, kydex press, boiled linseed oil, tung oil, polyurethane, cerakote, forge, blacksmith's hammer, anvil, power hammer..... That's all I can think of right now lol.
@@BrassBashers I'm too stupid to understand all this shit you said but I hope one day I'll get to that point.
@@isaac.3347 I hope you do too, bud. It helps to go to tech school for machining lol
@@isaac.3347 you’re not too stupid lacking experience would be closer to right. With a little determination and patience you’ll find your mind and hands are very capable. If your not familiar with certain tools or techniques do a little research. There’s tons of instructional videos on an endless amount of skills. No ones a pro from day one. If you start a project and the end result isn’t perfection that not a problem. You learned what came fairly easy and what was tough for you. Research and practice the things that gave you trouble and you will get better at it. Practice on something that is scrap then you can’t mess up and won’t be so worried about ruining the piece. Patience persistence and practice builds confidence. That’s the key! Have fun! When it pisses you off take a break. Oh yea this goes without sayin but Safety first. One skill at a time and before long you’ll look down and realize damn that looks pretty damn good! Don’t doubt yourself my friend if you really want to learn and can find the time it’ll happen. Promise! Blessed be!
If I made that I’d be really happy for myself, congrats man
What craftsmanship! Amazing! I love it. Your friend must be proud. I hope he is winning his battle
I`ve done this ! lol wish I`d had your tools , did mine on an old sears bench grinder and 1x42 inch belt sander ! turned out pretty good . of course I did`nt do the etching , no equipment for it ! you do nice work
car battery charger for the etching works very good
Thinking of making one myself. Any chance you could show us a picture of the axe you made.
Philip Finke
Does a car battery charger actually work for etching? I’ve been wanting try etching for ages
Daniel, I've seen many videos about it, you would need an older battery charger. The new ones have a ground fall intercept and won't work
@@danielmunro6426 can’t use a smart charger, but the cheap ones that are basically a power supply with a 12v/6v and amperage selection toggle switch work well.
Excellent work.
My compliments on beautiful and creative work!
really amazing work. I have one critique. Do your texts in yellow. I'm a video guy and I found myself having to rewind because the text got swallowed by the background. In yellow they won't do that. Just a suggestion.
that sounds horrid
White text with a black outline is visible on any background.
Fred you are correct, I too had difficulty reading it. And I posted a comment on it elsewhere on here .
Best video I've seen yet converting normal axe to Viking axe. Well done sir!
RUclips inventors: This is what we thought people would use RUclips for.....
Lol, no it's not. Jawed Karim said it was because he couldn't easily find videos of Janet Jacksons breasts being exposed in the 2004 superbowl. Chad Hurley and Steve Chen said they originally wanted to make a video dating service, and they posted ads on craigslist where they'd pay hot women $100 to post videos of themselves, but when they couldn't get enough women, they decided to allow any videos.
I was on early youtube, we mostly used it for the first memes, and pirating TV shows.
@@Nebulaoblivion duuuuuuuude I miss all the pirated anime I would watch on RUclips.....those were good days
the whole video was very aesthetically pleasing
That is soooo awesome. The Viking motif just kicks it.
One of the most awesome and underated blade smith on RUclips
Thank you so much in the past I build an itching machine and was into metal and wood craft now that I'm on farm land bush your work and skills has reignited that passion to start doing this as a side income and hobby keep up the amazing craft.
Oh holy shit you meant etching.
Absolutely gorgeous! Just wish you would have shown the final touches, such has staining the handle and affixing the head to it
Sehr schöne und ausgeglichene Arbeit. Weiter so!
You should have some viking music in background. Js
By the gods... it is stunning. What a therapeutic video I enjoyed every second
Beautiful work, just a word of caution with using salt water for the etching process, along with the hydrogen and oxygen bubbles your also producing chlorine gas. Keep up the great work!
Your finished product is beautiful!
Great how to video! The subtitles were a little hard to read but other than that it was awesome! What a beautiful ax! Absolutely LOVED the mucus you used!!
Very cool start to finish.
The music gives me ptsd of being on hold to customer service.
Or a bad porn flick, lmao
They choose that music carefully to scare of complaints...
Tolle Arbeit , klasse Video, mir persönlich würde es ohne Musik noch besser gefallen
Mate, as you said 'very cool axe'. Look great as a decorative piece. Cheers for sharing.
Who said it's decorative?
@@Reykh24 the handle being carved may introduce new stress points, the axe head being heated could weaken the molecular bond making it dull easier.
Untitled Document I don’t think it got hot enough to even get close to mess with the heat temper but you could possibly be right
@@tomatoman3706 I should mention my previous comment is just a hunch, and not fact in any shape or form. I could definitely be wrong. I am only going off the _extremely limited_ information I have from watching different blacksmiths work. I'm probably the furthest thing one, as much as I find it fascinating. The biggest concern I have is definitely the handle just because you do not want a faulty handle when using an axe. That part of the comment is from experience lol
@@ThisIsMyHandle. Well a simple fix for making sure its not overheating is Just time. Wait for it to cool down between grinds and it should be fine
It was literally gripping. Great job, nice shots and chill beat in background. For me prefect
Excellent vid. I be starting a similar project tomorrow if I had access to the tools. Well thought out and with a great outcome.
Nice work Bonn !
Really cool, but I agree with those saying that the handle isn't ... handy. Maybe coat it with epoxy to display the pattern but make it smooth to hold?
Man, god of craftsmanship! Fantastic! Respect
You are quite the inspiration. Could be the excessive codeine coursing through my system but, still pretty sweet.
Guess you found somethin to do lol
Thanks for the tip of the paint as masking tape. For the details, it's very cool !
That turned out very nice ,like the way you take something simple and turn it into something beautiful .well done.
Beautiful Workmanship!
Dude your music chose is killing it.! Its almost as good as your craftsmanship.
Excellant work!!!
That’s etchings the coolest thing I’ve seen in a long time!!
"VERY NICE" -Borat voice
Anthony Ortegon
Hopefully while wearing a mankini.
That is GORGEOUS.
Dude that's pretty damn cool!! Just wondering about the temper on the blade.. it seemed pretty soft when you were filing it, maybe worth doing a heat treat
Not to mention the handle, which looks like pine and the rotary tool went through it like pine.
I loved this design
thanks for the tutorial sir, you've just gained a subscriber btw what is the music u had played for this video it was very nice and relaxing
You took the ordinary and made it extraordinary!
Awesome! Looks like it could be a Dwarfs axe from the Hobbit or LOTR! Love it!
True!!!!
That is just gorgeous
Instead of etching it with salt and DC, you could have done with way faster with the process I use : Acid. make a mix of 30% of hydrogen peroxide and the rest of chlorydric acid (the one you find at the drug store, should be at around 30% concentration, no need to find conentrated one). Keep your paint masking process and just put it into the mix. You'll see it's way quicker and could also be way deeper.
One good thing also : you can make the contour or you etching zone with wax (like the one around some cheeses), this way you don't have to immerge the whole piece, just create a "pool" around the zone anf fill it up with your mix. once you're done, use a sringe to remove the acid and simply rinse it with a solution of baking soda, it's a pH stabilizer (around 7), it will neutralise the acid and stop the etching.
Great job ! 👏😉🪓
It kinda reminds me of "Dawnguard War Axe" from Skyrim
Fantastic work and craftsmanship
Honestly, the only moment I thought it could in everyone garage was when the power supply was dead 🤣
Nice job anyway!
Hah! I beat you! I'd certainly be able to also remove the original handle with a saw. Would, must admit in order to avoid being _too_ arrogant, take me way more than it did in the video, but indeed I could! ;-)
looks so good
nice stencil work cant believe it took over five hours tho i found the music annoying and just had to mute it
Absolutely beautiful, nicely done.
"If you kill me you have nothing to bargain with"
*Shows him axe* I have this
Bruhhhhh literally watched that episode 10 minutes agoooooo
Damn u know what im thinking
Absolutely amazing!
Looks great!! This took so much skill as far as I can see. Great job man
check out my ax
Just amazing!!
A few years back, a young lady I knew was being physically threatened, she mentioned her intention of buying a knife for defence. Why? I asked. Because she knew the person threatening her carried one. For reasons to complex to go into here, I agreed that a weapon would be appropriate, and we were talking about what would work. Suddenly I remembered that the lady was not only Native American, but that within her culture lay the perfect solution. A tomahawk. 8 hours of carefully scooping out dead weight and reshaping the head of a hickory handle shingling axe on clearance at Lowe’s produced an extremely light, but blade heavy weapon that in use was a joy to use. Unknowingly, something in the reshaped head made the blade, while at 90 degrees to the handle, feel as though it thrust into the target like the point of a small sword. To be honest it didn’t look like much, I didn’t have time to make it pretty, but when the final test, just a casual swing into a pork shoulder saw the blade penetrate 5” through tough skin and nick the bone in the center.... Change of plans honey. Remember earlier I said hit the asshole once in the upper body and run? She nodded. Well that’s gonna kill him, self defence or not you do not need that grief. I spent an hour teaching her how to fake high and chop into the outside of his quad, and break into a run in one motion. Three days later, he stalked her, the little ax was drawn cleanly from inside her long skirt. She said he laughed at it and lunged. She said she felt punch through his jeans then crunch when it hit bone, felt things rip as she yanked it out of his thigh, heard him shriek weirdly like wind through power lines, and she never looked back for a hundred feet. She turned. He was on the ground and not moving. Who knows what he told the ambulance or the cops, but my friend was never bothered. A tomahawk is not so different from Ragnar’s axe, and I know first hand what a devastating weapon it can be.
That's awesome. Go you!!
Great video, i do have a potential recommendation however. Whenever you go to use the electricity, use two seperate pieces of metal instead of one bent piece. The main path for current is just going through the metal and not through the salt water. Just a recommendation.
Hi, I would like to know what kind of painture was the blue one and what was inside of the salt solution?? I am trying to make the same as you following this video. It looks amazing.
Don't know about the paint (probably just normal spraypaint; it's there as a resist to protect the parts you don't want to etch, and spraypaint'll do the job fine), but the salt solution for the etching looks like a pretty standard mix. Water and salt, that's all. Get a container of warm water (warm water helps dissolve the salt) and pour in some salt. You don't need to be precise about measuring, just get it so that it's saturated/cloudy. Maybe... 1/8th to 1/6th of a cup of salt for each cup of water? If you want something a bit more aggressive, use vinegar instead of water.
Just as a safety note, do it in a well-ventilated area, particuarly if you're using vinegar. The process creates nasty gas. Chlorine, IIRC. Small amounts, but not fun to expose your eyes to. Smells bad, too. Be sure to rinse your etched metal well afterwards to remove any leftover solution, or it'll rust quickly.
I wouldn't suggest using a welding power supply, partly for safety, partly because it might be too aggressive. On small areas or things like letter and numbers, you can use a 9v battery for power. For larger areas, I find a 12v car battery charger does the job just fine.
I believe he used acrylic paint for this job just make sure there is a thick enough coat, but u should listen to Cascadejackel^^^
@@Cascadejackal u seem to know what ur doing sir I have a question about the position of the clamps. In the video he had both clamps attached to the same piece of metal & I'm told that will blow out the fuse instantly. My dad said I should attach one clamp to the metal sheet & the other to the wire the axe is hanging on. I wanted to hear ur thoughts bc it sounds like u know a thing or two.
@@tanner2937 Positive clamp to the metal you want to etch or the wire it's hanging from, Negative clamp to the metal sheet.
Remember, Positive current flows towards Negative, taking some of the exposed metal with it. That's how etching, and electricity in general, works.
+ >>>>>>> -
@@Cascadejackal Thank you for your help I'll be sure to try this once I get some free time, have a good day man!
Multi talented. A rare jewel amongst grains of sand.
I know its meant as decoration, but practical side of me is tortured by ruined temper on the edge. I have done similar builds with old rusted axe heads but try to use trown away ones and keep the heat out of the blade by cooling it. You can even weld them, long as you keep the blade cooled. There is also some temper on the back side as its usually used as hammer. None of my work probably ends up used ever again, but i like to preserve its utility use how ever much i can.
I like this tipe of craftsmanship. Keep up the good work.
Wow- amazing work! You have a new subscriber 'cause of this vid
That came out pretty dang awesome!
Hey Bonn.
What kind of spray paint are you using for the stencil process?
Ever find the answer to this? It looks like primer
@@Senditkit_Racing ever find answer lol? I wonder too
Nice blend of techniques.
I was curious how you'd solve the problem of the axe being way to thick for a Viking axe, on account that grinding it down would likely spoil the temper of the toolsteel. But 3 minutes in, seeing you handfile makes me realize you do not plan to make this a Viking axe but just a decorated Hand axe. Oh well... At least a warning about not overheating of the steel when grinding would have been prudent. If the goal wasn't a Viking axe but a tool axe, then preserving the hardness would be advised.
Your image looks sexual upside down. Female.
@@mykls8712 Its an optical illusion
, people see in it what they want to see in it. Faces, dragons... women. Its all up to you and your imagination.
Beautiful work my friend. You inspire us all. 😀
Great man! Congrats! After seeing your video ive decide to make my own axe. Question: how do yo do to avoid rust? Thanks!
An Artist for sure!
How in the world are there 56 dislikes on this?? Seriously? This was great work!
They tried crafting an axe themselves, but failed lol
BBSurf37
Haters gonna hate...
There is always someone who is going to say they don't like the video they are just naysayers!
Can't be better!!
Possibly for the repetitive sh*t tier music?
Vinegar works good as an etching solution also yellow mustard works as well.
I bet you burn through files with the goin back and fourth l, they’re made to be ran in one direction. Don’t worry I learned this recently and that’s the only reason I’m tellin you lmao!!
HAHA I SAID THE SAME THING
Thanks for the ideas working on my 1st one hopefully I will be done by Christmas (is a present for my nephew). If it comes out half as nice as yours I will be happy.
Interesting build, I have one point of contention though. 2:50 when you're doing the file work; you should be only doing one direction with your file. By pulling back with in contact. your only prematurely wearing out your file.
hm you dont know how the file was manufactured.
@@diterpunkt4426 And you obviously don't know how they're made. files are like a table saw blade, made to cut one direction. By pulling the file back across the metal you flatten the teeth and dull the file.
That's not quite right. Modern files can cut in both ways. And I know how they are made...
Genius !
Easy way to make a viking axe. Cool great artwork.
Great video! I like your ingenuity, what axe brand did you start with?
Nice skills! My only suggestion would be to make a simpler handle because a handle like that is not useable for actual work - and an axe handle that looks like that is only going to hang on a wall. The best axes in my opinion are ones that look great but also function great.
i was scrolling threw the comments, and was wondering what kind of paint did u use on the axe?
7
Paint? Like for the etching? That's acid my dude, but you can use mustard to gewt a similar effect. Look up mustard patina if you don't believe me.
Some people use ordinary latex household paint. It's fairly water resistant and acid resistant.
You can use the stuff intended for tools and outdoor furniture too.
Do what he did, experiment with what you have!
Wow! That is beautiful work!!! 😍
Great Video. I have a question:
What is the blue paint type chemical called that was sprayed onto the axe before etching? Thanks :)
Thats nice!!! I like that you made the head copper.
Oi I've got an ax to grind with you... Where is my one! 🙄
Very nice. How long will the gold colour last for?
That’s so cool great etching work 👍🇬🇧
Great. Anybody know the name of the backing track?
Blue Nights and Yellow Days by Matt Large.
Awesome, can’t wait to try that project