Making Hand Cut Needle Files & Saws

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  • Опубликовано: 15 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 68

  • @young-salt
    @young-salt Месяц назад +2

    Its like cocomelon for dads. Please do more ancient workshop videos! Theyre always fascinating!

  • @georgenewlands9760
    @georgenewlands9760 Месяц назад +1

    I’m really impressed with how uniform the file teeth are…great work and very interesting (as always).

  • @lindonwatson5402
    @lindonwatson5402 Месяц назад +28

    poetry for my eyes, awesome work Mr Spring

  • @alank616
    @alank616 Месяц назад

    Now that's patience at its best , great video 🇦🇺

  • @davem3789
    @davem3789 Месяц назад +6

    Your freehand precision is amazing.

  • @jmatelli
    @jmatelli Месяц назад

    You, sir, has the pacience of a saint.

  • @leslieaustin151
    @leslieaustin151 Месяц назад +4

    Wonderful skills and beautifully filmed as always. Thanks Chris. Les 🇬🇧

  • @JoseSilveira-newhandleforYT
    @JoseSilveira-newhandleforYT Месяц назад +10

    I really admire your patience and consistency in these time consuming and repetitive tasks! Great job, Chris!

  • @boryscholewinski4370
    @boryscholewinski4370 Месяц назад +8

    This dear students is patience incarnated.

  • @kurtkrause7151
    @kurtkrause7151 Месяц назад +10

    In the seventies as a journeyman locksmith the need for custom springs was a constant, day to day. Next on that list was files. Working with dull files became a way of life. Thanks Chris, for your insight and ingenuity. 👍💪🤙

  • @624Dudley
    @624Dudley Месяц назад

    Still in awe of this demonstration. 👍

  • @rob3942
    @rob3942 Месяц назад

    Beautiful work, videography and music Chris. Patience of a saint to do that stuff. Gonya Go well

  • @kenharper5755
    @kenharper5755 Месяц назад +11

    True craftsman at work. Brilliant to watch. 👏

  • @AgiHammerthief
    @AgiHammerthief Месяц назад +9

    the thumbnail looks like a red laser.
    „do you expect me to talk?“ 😂

  • @billdoodson4232
    @billdoodson4232 Месяц назад +3

    I'm never going to be making anything like that. I have neither the patience, fortitude or skills. I'll just fork out for some factory made ones.
    How you manage to cut the file teeth so evenly knocks me out. Lovely job.

  • @Kris_at_WhiteOaksFarm
    @Kris_at_WhiteOaksFarm Месяц назад

    I have read about making files and rasps by hand. To see it done, was a revelation. Rasps especially, benefit by the slight randomness of being hand made. I'll be trying to make files and rasps once I get my new forge fired up. Not just for fun and education, but to use. I mostly work in wood, but putter with metal, welding and forging. I find all your work, beautiful. Thank you for sharing it.

  • @AW_DIY_garage
    @AW_DIY_garage Месяц назад +5

    Always mesmerizing

  • @69dblcab
    @69dblcab Месяц назад +1

    Chris, Always amazing. And seemingly did not really take an extraordinary amount of time. No compromises you have exactly what you wanted and need. Thanks for another GREAT VIDEO.

  • @MASI_forging
    @MASI_forging Месяц назад

    Great technique 👏👏

  • @CandidZulu
    @CandidZulu Месяц назад +2

    Modern hacksaw blades are one of the most wonderful tools we have - Not long ago they would constantly brake! Yesterday I cut out a piece that was 40x16x90mm from a 40x40 bar of steel. It was fast and uneventful, and again made me really appreciate hacksaws! I think the modern hacksaw has replaced what the cold chisel used to do in a workshop.

  • @TizonaAmanthia
    @TizonaAmanthia Месяц назад

    that last one is just a hand made hacksaw!

  • @Aminuts2009
    @Aminuts2009 Месяц назад +2

    I have a Lodge Sportsman's Grill too! I cook steaks with mine. LOL. You make it look easy and like, Oh just do this and you can do it too. But I suspect its not as easy as that.

  • @Dwohman
    @Dwohman Месяц назад

    I needed a relaxing video 😊 thank you Chris 🙂

  • @SeagullWaterPurifier
    @SeagullWaterPurifier Месяц назад

    Hi Chris - my dad made files too and other small tools for specific jobs nice to revisit that past with you cheers Pete 😊

  • @Stelios.Posantzis
    @Stelios.Posantzis Месяц назад +2

    I always wanted to know how files were made! Great stuff!

  • @salomao1971
    @salomao1971 Месяц назад +3

    O senhor é um mestre verdadeiro da sua arte .

  • @brenovsky
    @brenovsky Месяц назад +3

    *Clickspring posts a video* Today was a good day...

  • @RustyInventions-wz6ir
    @RustyInventions-wz6ir Месяц назад

    Very interesting. Nice work sir

  • @MarkC-h7l
    @MarkC-h7l Месяц назад

    awesome as always

  • @matthewsykes4814
    @matthewsykes4814 Месяц назад +2

    There is something to be said for the question "But why, when you can buy", easy answer "Because I chose to and in that I learn something. That is why".

    • @MrRlnansel
      @MrRlnansel Месяц назад +2

      The context here is making and using period correct tools for his Antikythera reproduction project. Sure, it'd be easier to use Swiss needle files and off-the-shelf hacksaw blades and jeweller's piercing saw blades (and a bench top lathe and milling machine as well), but the idea is to gain insight into how the original object would have been made.

  • @daveys
    @daveys Месяц назад +1

    Fabulous as always!

  • @sefarkas0
    @sefarkas0 Месяц назад

    Chris just showing us what we will never be, one great video at a time.

  • @lukearam9812
    @lukearam9812 Месяц назад +1

    First comment.... Nice to see a new vid up
    Top work as always Chris

  • @SWATDRUMMUH
    @SWATDRUMMUH Месяц назад +2

    Can't wait to see more on the main channel!

  • @wesplybon9510
    @wesplybon9510 Месяц назад +29

    I complain in video games when the prerequisite tools I need to make a particular item break or wear out and I have to make a new ones. But typically, I can just pop open the appropriate crafting interface and bang a handful out in short order. The same kind of problem in real life, particularly the ancient world, would have been a decent setback. Such a neat process though!

    • @sarinhighwind
      @sarinhighwind Месяц назад +2

      There were toolmakers and blacksmiths back then.
      If you were not the lone blacksmith. Youd go take him some horse shoes and your old files and get some new ones.

    • @dicksargent3582
      @dicksargent3582 Месяц назад +1

      @@sarinhighwind Blacksmiths made far more than just horse shoes. Hammers, knives, nails, drills,etal.

  • @dfunited1
    @dfunited1 Месяц назад +6

    I'm always amazed by your work! I was just talking earlier about how our ancestors' technological limitations bred some unthinkable creativity. The inverse of today's world where we have near infinite ability to create, but not as much "cleverness"

  • @greglaroche1753
    @greglaroche1753 Месяц назад

    Thanks for this great video. What type of steel were you using?

  • @petersilva4242
    @petersilva4242 Месяц назад +1

    Ive been doing a lot of hand scraping lately made a 500mm x 65mm camelback style straight edge from a lump of scrap cast iron and now working on a 300mm x 300mm surface plate for lapping in the future. Something very satisfying about achieving micron accuracy with only hand tools. Out of interest what easily available steel would be suitable for files. Im in qld and find it hard to source speciality steels without having to buy 6mtr lenghts etc. great work again mate

    • @DH-xw6jp
      @DH-xw6jp Месяц назад +1

      O1 is a decent hardenable steel. 1095, and 5160 (the stuff they make vehicle spring out of) are also both good steels if you need something hard and tough.

    • @leslieaustin151
      @leslieaustin151 Месяц назад +3

      Watch Chris’s other channel (“Clickspring”) and you’ll see what he uses. Ordinary mild steel, case-hardened to become high-carbon, but he shows how to do it. The whole channel is a wonderful compendium of skills and techniques.

  • @Chr.U.Cas1622
    @Chr.U.Cas1622 Месяц назад

    👍👌👏

  • @absmith666
    @absmith666 Месяц назад

    That’s the same way they made rifling buttons.

  • @ironhead65
    @ironhead65 Месяц назад

    About one minute in, what material is the top of that round work surface made from?
    Or maybe better, what is that called?

    • @MrRlnansel
      @MrRlnansel Месяц назад +1

      I expect it's lead or a lead alloy. That's the traditional surface for cutting teeth on a file blank. It has the requisite mass to be an anvil, yet is soft enough not to blunt the teeth you have so laboriously made on the first side when you flip the blank over to cut the other side.

  • @goodwaterhikes
    @goodwaterhikes Месяц назад

    😎👍☮

  • @KF-qj2rn
    @KF-qj2rn Месяц назад

    what steel?

  • @scottferguson2982
    @scottferguson2982 Месяц назад +1

    Files to make files to make saws.

  • @Unownerdead
    @Unownerdead Месяц назад

    Is it typical for a file to get tempered after hardening? I see that done with knives and chisels and cutting edges to make them less brittle, but always figured files needed be harder than that. I mean, store-bought files are very brittle in my experience.

    • @dicksargent3582
      @dicksargent3582 Месяц назад

      Yes

    • @MrRlnansel
      @MrRlnansel Месяц назад

      Mostly it's the tang being tempered. The saw back might get tempered a bit too, just enough to make the saw tougher while leaving the teeth as hard as possible. Usually this involves something like quenching the teeth alone and letting the material behind cool much more slowly.

  • @fainderskurs-koi8767
    @fainderskurs-koi8767 Месяц назад

    лайк

  • @airdamien
    @airdamien Месяц назад

    Ever consider making a sword?

  • @dmg4415
    @dmg4415 Месяц назад +1

    If you star without any tools at all (1 000 BC) which tool would be the first to create and how?

    • @kahlzun
      @kahlzun Месяц назад +4

      Rock Hammer. Method: pick up rock.

    • @dicksargent3582
      @dicksargent3582 Месяц назад

      A hammer, how a stone in one's hand.

    • @billdoodson4232
      @billdoodson4232 Месяц назад

      A hammer would be useful.

    • @emanwe01
      @emanwe01 Месяц назад +1

      The channel "Primitive Technology" started out by taking a stone roughly shaped like an axehead and grinding it against other rocks to give it a sharpened edge. He then used it to start crudely shaping wood for other tools.

  • @nicktecky55
    @nicktecky55 Месяц назад

    First time ever?

  • @kozka5302
    @kozka5302 Месяц назад

    рабочие насечки выглядят как /|_/|_/|_/|_
    или
    как /\/\/\/\/\
    ?

  • @andypughtube
    @andypughtube Месяц назад +1

    You do know that they sell them in shops, right? 🙂

    • @multirole240
      @multirole240 Месяц назад

      Yes, But not the ones you want !

  • @jeffarmstrong1308
    @jeffarmstrong1308 Месяц назад +1

    I keep meaning to ask you -
    What's your forge? It looks like a Hibachi or similar