Adam Savage Baffled by Obscure Armor-Making Tools!

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  • Опубликовано: 27 фев 2023
  • The largest single collection of armorer's tools in the world resides at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, where they're put to use in the Arms and Armor conservation lab to restore artifacts for display. Adam visits the workshop where Associate Conservator Sean Belair shows Adam some of the more arcane and esoteric tools used over a century ago to forge armor!
    The MET's Arms and Armor Department: www.metmuseum.org/about-the-m...
    Shot and edited by Joey Fameli
    Music by Jinglepunks
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    Intro bumper by Abe Dieckman
    Thanks for watching!
    #adamsavage #armor #restoration
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Комментарии • 732

  • @tested
    @tested  Год назад +105

    The MET's Arms and Armor Department: www.metmuseum.org/about-the-met/collection-areas/arms-and-armor

    • @stevenb7319
      @stevenb7319 Год назад +5

      The hollow peen hammer could be used to push down steel that has been puckered by pushing a rivet through. That would allow a tight fit rivet instead of a loose fit hinge like on articulated joints. It could also be used to repair the area around the stationary rivet if the sheet metal had been worn to the point the rivet was loose. It would push the sheet metal back in around the rivet and make the fit tight again. This as a repair tool would be less useful in a museum as that kind of wear would generally come from use / donning and doffing.

    • @Malachi-Budke
      @Malachi-Budke Год назад +1

      Thanks Adam

    • @dustinbird2090
      @dustinbird2090 Год назад +4

      You and the team should definitely see about following up with The Met if and when they've got updates on the historical provenance of their blacksmith tool collection. Thanks for showcasing this cool bit of living shop history.

    • @DonariaRegia
      @DonariaRegia Год назад +1

      Anyone that doesn't watch to the end will miss the most ridiculous set of calipers you've ever seen. That whole shop is wild.

    • @timpuddephatt4996
      @timpuddephatt4996 Год назад

      @@stevenb7319 a rivet set/snap would be more useful for that, especially given the other face not being a striking face. my two pence it that it could be for hollow planishing on a convex surface. they should try and see what makes sense

  • @wadewilsondp07c31
    @wadewilsondp07c31 Год назад +650

    Can we please get an update to this one once some of the intern’s research is completed? I’m sure we’d all like to know more of the story when it’s available.

    • @BigpapamoneymanMVPtypebeat
      @BigpapamoneymanMVPtypebeat Год назад +6

      Yess

    • @Mighty_Atheismo
      @Mighty_Atheismo Год назад +6

      "Research' is here a euphamism for fact checking the nerds in the comments section.

    • @pendragnx
      @pendragnx Год назад +2

      yes, an update would be great

    • @jamesmartin3256
      @jamesmartin3256 Год назад +8

      Can we also get a confirmation that they're being paid properly for their work... clearly their skills are invaluable for this project and it seems weird to catergorise them as an intern

    • @Well...Darn.
      @Well...Darn. Год назад +6

      @@jamesmartin3256 Being an intern, it would be a surprise if they are paid at all. Sure, sometimes an intern will be paid, but mostly it's for experience related to what the person is studying in school.

  • @jaimebarr8426
    @jaimebarr8426 Год назад +415

    Adam looks as happy as a bird that found a french fry.

    • @Scuba_Bro
      @Scuba_Bro Год назад +5

      Without the head tilting trying to swallow the fry 😂

    • @nokbeen3654
      @nokbeen3654 Год назад +9

      @@Scuba_Bro no, absolutely *with* the head tilting
      Someone should animate this now.
      Adam looking like a bird agressivly tilting his head back, swallowing and entire, huge french fry like a bird

    • @robadams1645
      @robadams1645 Год назад +10

      I picture the staff trying to close at the end of the day and Adam wanting to see just one more thing.

    • @KevinJonson
      @KevinJonson Год назад +5

      Except that instead of a French fry, its a hollow peen hammer.

    • @fishdude666ify
      @fishdude666ify Год назад

      *A* French fry? More like a full large fry STILL IN THE BAG that he can carry home! Good one though, the day's still young but so far you win RUclips comments for the day.

  • @docschro6847
    @docschro6847 Год назад +247

    I love it when collections are living history and still not only in use but provide historical record of the arts

  • @flyingardilla143
    @flyingardilla143 Год назад +432

    My grandfather was a jeweler and watchmaker. I always loved going through his bizarre tools trying to figure out what they were for. When I couldn't figure it out - I would ask him. Now that I have his tools, I wish I remembered everything he told me.

    • @fajile5109
      @fajile5109 Год назад +22

      If you keep learning about it you will probably have flashbacks. Literally.

    • @TheMyeloman
      @TheMyeloman Год назад +32

      After my grandfather passed I asked for three small things from his estate, two old ratcheting box-end wrenches, and a “Yankee” screwdriver. Every time he’d be in his garage or under his pickup in the yard working on something I was his “gopher”, fetching tools for him, and when not fetching I’d play with those three tools because they had moving parts. They are my most prized tools to this day…

    • @woofer2121
      @woofer2121 Год назад +3

      memory is a funny thing isnt it

    • @GaryGraham66
      @GaryGraham66 Год назад +3

      @@matthewnienkirchen8083 When my grandfather passed we cleared out his garage/workshop.
      He had TWO! tobacco tins FULL to the brim of tiny 12BA screws from spectacles!
      I tried to count them all but gave up after losing count three times.

    • @melody3741
      @melody3741 Год назад

      If you send pics i can help and there are a lot of watchmaker forums online. You should check it out when you get time, you could build a community while remembering and honoring him.

  • @MrNagoja
    @MrNagoja Год назад +228

    Hi Adam and Crew. When i was an apprentic one off my old Masters used a rivethammer like that. It was to make a stand off rivet (Zapfenniete german). You butt the rivet in a hole in a sheet use the Hammer to make a shelf in the rivet as hi as you need it then u can rivet the next sheet with a stand off to the first

    • @JGilbertMetal
      @JGilbertMetal Год назад +6

      I doubt it's a top tool/struck tool though, since if you pause at 8:36 you can see it's curved for peening.

    • @kealke
      @kealke Год назад +15

      @MrNagoja I wanted to comment this, but you beat me to it. This is the use i learned for it too. Apparently theyre more common in our part of Europe.

    • @Earthenfist
      @Earthenfist Год назад +10

      They'd have to be very precise with the swings. But then again, I think 'precise swings' is something that most armorers end up practicing anyways.

    • @kealke
      @kealke Год назад +5

      @@aaronmoore3050 A lot gets lost in translation. Better would be to simply learn German language. Since we're close to Germany, we learn in school and i can tell you its not a hard language to learn.

    • @honeybadgeractual5734
      @honeybadgeractual5734 Год назад +7

      ​@@Earthenfistthey wouldn't swing the peen, they would place it over the hot work on the anvil like a punch, then strike the hammer end with another hammer to cause the shank of the rivet to peen, without peening the end of the rivet, allowing the riveting of multiple pieces spaced apart.
      My cousin also uses a similar hammer thingy to make rivets from pices of steel pin, you can torch the end of the shank, hammer it down and it creates a shoulder, turn it over above a bucket, struck the back side knocking the rivet free, flip it back over, toss another steel dowel in and begin again.
      He usually only does a few rivets at a time because the hammer rivet maker tends to heat up and grab the rivets making it hard to get them out without letting it cool fully.

  • @TheBlacksmithingPastor
    @TheBlacksmithingPastor Год назад +218

    I am a blacksmith and was a tin smith... I think the hollow pein hammer would be really hand for riveting. My guess would be it would be used to press the two pieces being riveted together. Here is how I would use it. Place a rivet with a head already on one side through a hole to join the two pieces together. Back the rivet with a stake anvil. Hold a wooden mallet in one hand and the hollow pein in your main hammering hand. Place the hollow pein over end on the rivet to be formed and smack it tight with a mallet. Then flip the hollow pein around and begin heading the other side of the rivet. At a couple points during process the hammer and mallet could be used to alternate between tightening and heading. Small rivets are often done cold... and in the process of doing a rivet cold I could see how it might really help to do a bunch of tightly spaced rivets really quickly. My guess would also be that an assistant would be the one keeping the armor pieces stable and feeding the other guy the next rivet. Maybe even placing them in the holes and replacing the stack on the stake. So one guy holding the armor and a pocket full of cold rivets ready to go... the other guy with a mallet in one hand the hollow pein in the other. Just a guess though...

    • @greenbat8018
      @greenbat8018 Год назад +9

      The hollow peen hammer is probably a easier way for an armorer to work with a apprentice to upset the rivet before rounding it over, indeed. You are still able to get somewhat the same tool but in a punch form. I have used the upsetting to expand the rivet so it holds in place and it's easier to hammer it down.

    • @MetricJester
      @MetricJester Год назад +7

      It makes me think of collared rivets, like a washer on a nail that you have to set before heating and actual peening.

    • @ironsmiter
      @ironsmiter Год назад +16

      @@MetricJester I have MADE a hammer like that before, for setting copper "washer rivets" for joining thin sheet metal. As you suggested, the hollow end is used for setting the washer onto the rivet, the shaft is cut to length, then the flat face is used to peen it in place. The setting action doesn't hurt the hammer because I always used the rawhide mallet to hit the face. Being a copper rivet, it is done cold (even smaller iron rivets are often done cold, and hot riveting is really only needed for water/air tight constructions or larger diameter rivets).

    • @keithkempenich6401
      @keithkempenich6401 Год назад +3

      Exactly my thought! I often use a small socket from a ratchet set to do just that. The task that immediately comes to mind is setting rivet washers. While fixed joints don't require a washer, any articulating movement does, and getting the washer to seat properly over a rivet can sometimes be a pain. All of this I say from experience as an armorer myself.

    • @jamesforbes2871
      @jamesforbes2871 Год назад +15

      @@ironsmiter ...
      I built traditional boats for many years. We called those "roving" hammers ... as you say, to "set" the copper washers (roves) over the copper nails, in lap strake planking. There would usually be a corresponding rove punch for each sized rivet. We might also just "clench" the boat nails, using a dolly on less expensive boats

  • @dailycgi
    @dailycgi Год назад +96

    I love how many different fields Adam is interested in and appreciate the fact that he's never lost his passion and dedication to learning.

  • @_D_P_
    @_D_P_ Год назад +3

    The fact that this is the second video in one corner of a larger room makes me think there are some VERY COOL THINGS to see if the camera were to turn around.

  • @gemguardianzero
    @gemguardianzero Год назад +59

    That intern definitely has a lot of work ahead of them! It looks like a fascinating project. Good luck!

  • @howshafern420
    @howshafern420 Год назад +62

    The same hammer is used for loose fitting rivets on joints in metal working where you need to rivet two or more items with the rivet as the point of movement. the depth of hole in hammer is used to set the max crush limit for items needing a lose fit connection, the ones i have seen in past have adjustable depths on them but same basic hammer shape and hole in center.
    thanks for the content

    • @AlasdairGR
      @AlasdairGR Год назад

      +++

    • @bunhelsingslegacy3549
      @bunhelsingslegacy3549 Год назад +2

      I was thinking using it to push the leather over the copper rivets, but that makes sense too. We usually use washers for our loose fit connections.

  • @donjones4719
    @donjones4719 Год назад +2

    To anyone who envies the intern who will be working on this: It's not hard to find a museum that needs interns (paid and volunteer) to do very important work behind the scenes. For one thing, hundreds of years worth of research and cataloguing has to be digitally imaged, and that process often involves figuring out how to reorganize stuff. It may sound tedious but in my experience it's not, and it's *very* rewarding to know you've made a contribution to scholarship that will benefit many generations to come.

  • @HunterReport
    @HunterReport Год назад +33

    I used to see the armor as a kid. Full circle to know the staff of just that department is a treasure trove in and of itself. Amazing

  • @Chris-ut6eq
    @Chris-ut6eq Год назад +2

    Amazing set of tools and loved the comment "I just want to touch everything!"

  • @Malachi-Budke
    @Malachi-Budke Год назад +61

    Mr. Savage, you NEVER disappoint with your content!

    • @hisownsidekick
      @hisownsidekick Год назад +1

      The only disappointing thing about Tested content is that eventually, the videos end.

  • @bennyboogenheimer4553
    @bennyboogenheimer4553 Год назад +22

    I grew up in my Grandfather's sheet metal shop in Philly.
    He always said that, JR on any tool meant it was the Jr. (junior) version
    of that tool.
    G being the "Grand" tool (as in 4' or longer)
    SR (Senior)being the most common used size, and JR being the smaller hand held tool size.
    "B" tools are the most rare tools, because they're one off's. They were "Bastard" tools,
    meaning they were made by one man, then improved on by the next owner. (waist not, want not) Making the old style obsolete.
    Sadly they were all stolen back in the 1960 MLK riots.
    Also, that's a Rivet Hammer. 1 hole in each piece of sheet steel, push the rivet up from below, slide the hole down over the rivet give it a blow to "set" the rivet. (tightening it in the 2 pieces of metal) then peen over to your desired look.
    If you're ever in Philly, The Art Museum has some sweet suits of armor.

  • @philc2729
    @philc2729 Год назад +6

    I'm simply floored by the set of tools there. I also was agape at the detailed and specific tools you showed on screen. Thanks for bringing this to our living room.

  • @jaberwoky_
    @jaberwoky_ Год назад +5

    My father was a machinist and I have his tools in a glass top display table. Micrometers, calipers, taps, punches, etc. Cool stuff that needed a place to be appreciated and easy to pull out and hold. Cheers, dad.

  • @biocow9070
    @biocow9070 Год назад +2

    7:45, Adam jumping with joy at the fact they have tools they don't know the use of.

  • @chrisbolland5634
    @chrisbolland5634 Год назад +6

    I love that Adam, when examining the mystery hammer, pulls out a copy of an Apollo flight flashlight to see down into it. Never change Adam.

  • @johnsanders8168
    @johnsanders8168 11 месяцев назад +1

    Just WOW! Adam's enthusiasm is infectious. And then to see the dedication people to preserving an artform that probably progressed metallurgy by leaps an bounds. Just friggin interesting. Thank you!!

  • @inactive67
    @inactive67 Год назад +2

    Things you dont know until you know then you find out they dont even know.....How bloody awesome!!!

  • @johnleith3161
    @johnleith3161 Год назад +5

    I love the way that Adam completely failed to play it cool. He was like a kid in a toy shop.

  • @crisr.8280
    @crisr.8280 Год назад +5

    I find this all fascinating. As someone that started learning and making theater and cosplay props on and off I can understand the frustration and necessity of making/repurposing your own tools, molds, patterns, cutouts, etc. to get the piece you want to make "just right".
    I started with paper and card board, learned wood working, some light metal work, a little bit of leather working, some painting, and only now I am touching on foam shaping and molding. The process is never-ending, rigorous, and frustrating but at the end, rewarding.

  • @shamarrad
    @shamarrad Год назад +18

    What an amazing collection! If I couldn't see it myself, seeing it through you is the next best thing.

  • @SAOS451316
    @SAOS451316 Год назад +28

    I recognize that mystery tool! That hollow-peen hammer is not technically a hammer; It's a hot-working monkey tool. Notice that it's not wedged, and that's because it's not meant for swinging. You put the hollow part over a long tenon and you hit the face of the 'hammer' to flatten the junction between the tenon and the wider material. Bet any money that the face is soft and the hollow end is hardened.
    If you have a heavy piece of steel with a little tenon sticking out of it it could be radiating too much heat to work safely or comfortably with a hand-held monkey tool. Thus they put it on a stick so they don't get burned. It's riveting-adjacent I suppose since you can make flush rivets with it.

    • @cholulahotsauce6166
      @cholulahotsauce6166 Год назад +1

      Yeah but then why is the face polished and dressed?

    • @SAOS451316
      @SAOS451316 Год назад +7

      @@cholulahotsauce6166 It's probably at least a hundred years old. Most likely at some point someone wanted to use it like a hammer. Or perhaps it got rather mushroomed and split from wear and someone made it nicer than it used to be. It could be rehardened and rehandled and the only evidence of its original intended use would be the hole. Everything is a multitool if you're creative or desperate enough!

    • @chrisharrell5945
      @chrisharrell5945 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@SAOS451316 Thats a brilliant thought above. It would make sense for the striking head to be polished at some point so that it could double as a hammer when resources/ resourcing is already challenging enough for people of the yesteryears. Heck, even today I have a shop full of hybridized and converted tooling 🙃

    • @maplebones
      @maplebones 10 месяцев назад

      Sometimes armorers make to tools that don't make any sense in order to prank their apprentices. Even today masters in shops will send their helpers to go find a left handed monkey wrench.

    • @maplebones
      @maplebones 10 месяцев назад

      Sometimes armorers make to tools that don't make any sense in order to prank their apprentices. Even today masters in shops will send their helpers to go find a left handed monkey wrench.

  • @justinhaller569
    @justinhaller569 Год назад +1

    I share the same love Adam! Wow! To be in that room with you and all that gadgetry!!!! Awesome!!! Your work is second to none!

  • @ashleysmith3106
    @ashleysmith3106 Год назад +2

    A wonderful French Museum of tools and equipment is the Maison de l'Outil et de la Pensée Ouvrière à Troyes (The Museum of Tools and the Philosophy of Labour) in Troyes; capital of the Aube département, which I'm sure Adam would enjoy. It houses a vast collection of pre-20th century items going back hundreds of years, plus a huge related library. Sometimes the things used for making objects are more amazing than the objects themselves ! Not to be missed by Fans of this channel!

  • @DoomsdayAdam777
    @DoomsdayAdam777 Год назад +1

    What a fantastic shop tour guide Sean Belair is.

    • @DoomsdayAdam777
      @DoomsdayAdam777 Год назад

      looking forward to the rivet article.

    • @javabill
      @javabill Год назад

      Sean is a force of nature & an outstanding conservator.

  • @fredbrooks1386
    @fredbrooks1386 Год назад +12

    This was one of the best. Absolutely fascinating! So much to do so little time!

  • @Cobyba
    @Cobyba Год назад +3

    I think it's wonderful that the tools are both part of the collection and still used as tools. I think that better shows their quality and I'm sure the creator would be proud knowing his tools were still being used to this day.

  • @SteveWood_Commando_at_large
    @SteveWood_Commando_at_large Год назад +3

    The Frazier Museum in Louisville, Ky has a huge collection of gunsmithing tools that are well over 150 years old with many tools that they have know idea what they were used for.

  • @tested
    @tested  Год назад +14

    The MET's Arms and Armor Department: www.metmuseum.org/about-the-met/collection-areas/arms-and-armor
    Join this channel to support Tested and get access to perks:
    ruclips.net/channel/UCiDJtJKMICpb9B1qf7qjEOAjoin

  • @Babarudra
    @Babarudra Год назад +3

    Very cool, Adam. Thank you for bringing us along!

  • @1bytesnack369
    @1bytesnack369 Год назад +3

    Wooow! How is this video not over an hour? So much to learn!

  • @thomashverring9484
    @thomashverring9484 Год назад +1

    I'm so glad you noticed the calipers! I'd been shouting at the screen for half the video 😅

  • @rjt3476
    @rjt3476 Год назад +1

    Casually dropping the Royal Armories in Leeds. Located in the heart of England, West Yorkshire. An amazing place to visit!

  • @mr.behaving
    @mr.behaving Год назад +2

    7:57 I have a similar hollow peen tool with the hole in it, that my grandfather handed down to me. My hammer isn't hardened on the 'head side' so it can be struck by another hammer safely.
    How I use it is when I have 2 pieces of metal that need to be affixed, but still move independently, I peen the rivet to the first plate, leaving the rest of the rivet proud.. then i put the second plate over top and final peening to join the 2 together. there may be other uses, but that's what my grandfather showed me

    • @JGilbertMetal
      @JGilbertMetal Год назад

      except that unless I'm mistaken, the hammer in the video is curved, which makes no sense for a top tool/struck tool, but is somewhat common for a peening hammer. Might be for texturing?

  • @JohnSmith-xs4sx
    @JohnSmith-xs4sx Год назад +3

    I knew you would spot those calipers...what an incredible collection , so glad its been preserved and still used as well on original ancient armor....that's amazing :)

  • @joakimhansen7733
    @joakimhansen7733 Год назад +11

    For a channel full of awesome videos, this one was just top notch.

  • @JimJonesKoolaid
    @JimJonesKoolaid Год назад

    Oh my god the MET is my favorite museum of all time mainly due to the Arms and Armor section. So cool to see this!!

  • @demetricorcovelos1114
    @demetricorcovelos1114 Год назад +1

    As someone who has toold that have been handed down including some very strange tools that were custom made for working on horseless carriages I know every single one of my tools I love them & in a few years when I die they go to a friend & he will give them to his nephew continuing the journey

  • @camrontabler7543
    @camrontabler7543 Год назад +7

    Adam should definitely make horse armor calipers for his shop

  • @user-vw4ui5gz6b
    @user-vw4ui5gz6b 11 месяцев назад

    WOW! Not only the tools but also people are part of living history. Amazing and even touching 😮

  • @TheBamaChad-W4CHD
    @TheBamaChad-W4CHD 11 месяцев назад +1

    Omg I could spend years in that shop! Amazing collection and that's just a small part seen on camera. Just wow I am extremely jealous!

  • @nikiTricoteuse
    @nikiTricoteuse Год назад

    That was fantastic in every way. Thank you Adam and RUclips's algorithms.

  • @AldHuxl
    @AldHuxl Год назад +2

    Couldn't imagine a better shop for Adam to visit than this or a better person to present it to the world.
    Looking forward to a one day build of Adam making horse calipers.

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred Год назад

      They're dividers.

  • @jaredshooter8735
    @jaredshooter8735 Год назад +2

    I love hearing Leeds get name-dropped, it was just a tourist attraction to me when I lived there but across a few historical channels and a few sites, I am now starting to see that it is an important part of figuring out our history, not just as the western world, But as a species. (They have a very through collection from China and India from what I remember)

  • @macdavid20
    @macdavid20 11 месяцев назад

    Such a beautiful series, the pulse of living history breathing through this unique mini series, valuable historical tapestry

  • @timberrecycling
    @timberrecycling Год назад +2

    thank you so much for sharing this. never would have seen something like this otherwise and that is some incredible living history!

  • @TheSkandihoovian
    @TheSkandihoovian Год назад +3

    So absolutely cool!!! I love the historical look at making

  • @scottnichols2929
    @scottnichols2929 Год назад +5

    I hope there are more videos of this collection.

    • @tested
      @tested  Год назад +5

      There are! Stay tuned.

  • @AuntieHauntieGames
    @AuntieHauntieGames Год назад +1

    Of all the things Adam gets excited about out there, this must be the thing he is most excited about. He can barely contain himself and it is amazing to watch.

  • @PENFOLD5
    @PENFOLD5 Год назад

    Adam, please stay in touch with these people and follow up with the history of these tools that their intern digs up!

  • @MooreDoing
    @MooreDoing Год назад +1

    What a great episode!!! That was such a treat. The poor guy was sweating a lot but he's a cool dude.🍻

  • @redbeardedpanda
    @redbeardedpanda Год назад

    Omg! This is incredibly awesome! How cool is it that we got to share that experience with you! Thank you Adam!

  • @AlFooteIII
    @AlFooteIII Год назад +3

    One of my favorite places in the world! So exciting that you got to go behind the scenes!

    • @tested
      @tested  Год назад +3

      We are SO lucky. We loved every minute.

  • @thekeeler846
    @thekeeler846 Год назад +1

    This whole series is absolutely fascinating! I love it!

  • @da.2736
    @da.2736 Год назад +1

    This was pretty cool. I can’t wait to hear more about the history of these tools!

  • @jenniferwagner4595
    @jenniferwagner4595 Год назад +1

    I would happily watch you guys walk through the collection for hours.

  • @maggs131
    @maggs131 Год назад +1

    I wish I had one item that would make Adam gasp in astonishment. His giddiness is so infectious

  • @corrinastanley125
    @corrinastanley125 Год назад +1

    Thanks Tested team, I was looking forward to this. Wow.

  • @Wanton110
    @Wanton110 Год назад +2

    I recall a similar 'hollow peen' hammer (wasn't referred to as that) in my high school metal shop.. back in the 80s.. and it was used to do fluting on tight curves.. whether it's the same thing.. who knows

  • @anotherwesley7661
    @anotherwesley7661 Год назад +1

    Every second of this is delightful to me. I hope they make a blog or something about the state of the intern's discoveries!

  • @nephicus339
    @nephicus339 Год назад

    Always happy to see someone else who gets as excited I do about the tools that make the things that wow people.

  • @scottnj2503
    @scottnj2503 Год назад

    Out of the firey furnace arose the world we know today. I love tools, facinated with all types. This is a world apart, yet intimately part of our world today. Great stuff Adam, thanks for sharing.

  • @RUSSO_V_HAWAII
    @RUSSO_V_HAWAII Год назад

    I love all of these tools so much as well. Of course Adam is at peak happiness !🤙🏽⚒

  • @aserta
    @aserta Год назад +2

    8:15 edited cleaned out answer:
    It's a hammer used for driving rivets to a specific depth without deforming the washer that's found at the base (of that specific rivet). The reason it's rare it's because it's actually used in conjunction with a specific anvil that you're missing, called a "bombarde" anvil.
    First you drive the washer in, which locks the rivet. Then you snip the excess off and peen the remaining end over the washer, finishing the rivet permanently. You can see these in copper, brass, for steel for leather.

  • @alanmclenon9703
    @alanmclenon9703 Год назад +6

    That was very interesting. I had a metal shaping class at Dagger Tools here in Michigan and the methods and terminology for Metal Shaping for auto and motorcycle panels is pretty much the same. I'm sure from a historical perspective they are based on ancient methods passed down through generations.

  • @JonMadsen70
    @JonMadsen70 Год назад

    I have a set of those anvil shears that I inherited from my grandfather along with a couple of anvils and assorted tools. It's cool seeing that collection. It stirs up a lot of good memories.

  • @stinkeyecustoms
    @stinkeyecustoms Год назад

    Thank you SO much for this tour! Its definitelyon my list of "go to" places now!

  • @Fuzzycat16
    @Fuzzycat16 Год назад +2

    That man is clearly passionate about is work. Cheers.

  • @Peter-oh3hc
    @Peter-oh3hc Год назад

    The level of joy is just amazing

  • @blacksmithcowboy4725
    @blacksmithcowboy4725 Год назад

    Very cool video, Adam. Old tools are fascinating. Years ago, I inherited my Great-grandfathers blacksmithing tools that he used 100 years ago.
    I totally understand your enthusiasm in getting to see that collection.

  • @Mtbambeno
    @Mtbambeno Год назад

    Love this! Thank you for sharing this with us!

  • @Stepica
    @Stepica Год назад +1

    We had those big wooden calipers in my highschool (gymnazium) circa 2000. It had chalk holder instead of one point and we would use it as a big comoass and draw circles in geometry classes on a blackboard. Good times.

  • @seabeepirate
    @seabeepirate Год назад +3

    What a treat it would be to explore that workshop!

  • @BotsWeekendCovers
    @BotsWeekendCovers Год назад

    Fascinating!!!!! Thank you Adam!!!!

  • @bigfoot8514
    @bigfoot8514 Год назад

    The time invested in all these tools, hammers, and their evolution is mind boggling! I envy this collection!

  • @elijahhutchinson3031
    @elijahhutchinson3031 Год назад +2

    That was a darn cool episode!

  • @bnuttsgee
    @bnuttsgee Год назад

    I'm so glad they are still using the tools.

  • @b62boom1
    @b62boom1 Год назад

    Blimey! As a 53 year old man who's worked with my hands for most of my adult life, this has given me serious workshop envey. What a place, and that they still use the tools is amazing!

  • @timd7709
    @timd7709 Год назад +1

    oh man this reminds me of when i was an armorers apprentice.... so much fun.... love seeing all those tools again..
    and i seem to remember using a hammer like the one with the hole in for rivets... but not sure these days...

  • @Yora21
    @Yora21 Год назад +3

    I never really thought about learning something about old processes not by studying the finished products that were made, but by the tools the makers had. Some tools might have super niche applications for which most people just used a more common tool that takes slightly more time to use, but generally speaking, craftsmen would keep tools around in their workshops because they need them for their products.
    Having both finished pieces and the tools allows you to try to understand the process from two different directions.

  • @richardbrobeck2384
    @richardbrobeck2384 Год назад

    what a Beautiful collection of tools !

  • @Seven_Craig
    @Seven_Craig Год назад

    Great content! Thank you Adam.

  • @edwardperrault3650
    @edwardperrault3650 Год назад +2

    Whenever I got to the Met, I always spend a very large portion of the time I am there admiring the armor display. It is spectacular. It is pretty cool to see the tools they use to keep it that way. The artifacts on display also include a lot of Asian armor (particularly Japanese) and a large number of old weapons, including ancient firearms. Any chance we'll be seeing future videos covering those elements of the display?

  • @LamboHITtheLOTTO
    @LamboHITtheLOTTO Год назад +1

    Dude, those giant pliers in the thumbnail look like the pliers off of a old 90s PS1 gem called clock tower,super cool btw!

  • @tiber_drake
    @tiber_drake Год назад

    I've seen instruments like theese in my fellow armorysmith's videos, but never so many of them. This is amazing!

  • @kaozthemage2633
    @kaozthemage2633 Год назад

    You're an incredible individual, #AdamSavage. Thank you for sharing your wealth of knowledge and taking us on thrilling adventures.

  • @andyvan5692
    @andyvan5692 Год назад

    adam, another use for the tool at 8:35 is as a 'wad punch' you use a sledge hammer on the polished end to strike the dounut side into a patch of leather, like the tine tool for cutting stiching holes, the hole catches the 'plug' cut by the circle; or if the rivit is HOT, it can be a rivet cutter, to cut the rivet away, to split parts during a repair job, to replace leather parts.

  • @Djlamay
    @Djlamay Год назад

    I was a sheet metal mechanic on AV8-B and we used a tool exactly like that to “dimple” thin pieces of titanium heat shield that need to be riveted flush but to thin to countersink. You would drill the two pieces 2 drill size smaller than the rivet, this would let the metal stretch as it would dimple and allow the rivet to fit after dimpling. On the bottom was 100 degree “pin” that would be used to create the required angle of the rivet and thus be exactly counter sunk over and over quickly by hand.

  • @quiquecruz2890
    @quiquecruz2890 Год назад +1

    That looks like heaven!

  • @tomfull6637
    @tomfull6637 Год назад

    Wow! Great story to cover! Thx

  • @simonbach3618
    @simonbach3618 9 месяцев назад

    Adams Enthusiasm is the best it is contagious!

  • @marvindebot3264
    @marvindebot3264 Год назад +1

    having worked in the History and technology section of a major museum when I was much younger I can say some of the best items in the collection were ones we used in the workshop to restore and conserve others.

  • @wackyvorlon
    @wackyvorlon Год назад +1

    Such beautiful tools.

  • @j3tztbassman123
    @j3tztbassman123 Год назад

    So cool. Must share.

  • @jeffvirosztko5241
    @jeffvirosztko5241 Год назад

    Thanks Adam for remaining available to us with your curiosity and experience...

  • @thedustofthefuture1693
    @thedustofthefuture1693 Год назад

    I hope to one day find a workplace half as interesting, communal and creative