Why didn't you notice how this long, round, hollow log was made? I watch all the videos from the beginning and was wondering how you made it. Why did you miss this episode? Perhaps this is also a big old bamboo?
Hey Primitive Skills, why don't you start a Patreon account? I've been watching your channel for two years now, and this is some quality content, i would happily support you.
My son and I are going to try and make one here with what we have available..and 10. 2. 1..some things from hardware stores. But none the less hardship times will be well met from All your videos Primitive Skills. Gardening..fish .even rice though in containers because of our very short growing seasons. We already have gingerroot started..and some test grains of prices. This is going to be Great Times even though my kids and I are older adults now. Our hearts will be much happier as I am at some point going to move on into that universal highway. Great Heart Loves. Moi from Maine USA.
@@chrismalcomson7640 not saying its hard, but whats the point of showing a video of making something if your just gonna leave out massive steps, (also looking at it it deffs looks like its been done with modern tools off camera, not that it can be done with his tools but im sure for the sake of a video not taking 2 months its been bored out, im mean look at how clean the bore is, esp the first few inches when the cap log goes. not way its been done with a crude iron axe or a sharp stick)
Skills and persistence are like the chicken and the egg. Productivity is bliss. We cannot all have the resources that this man has, but we can work with the materials at hand. This is ultimately what guides the progression. Working with your hands on your local materials will be rewarding. Promise.
I thoroughly enjoy your videos! Watching you do things that majority of people today cannot do and also take for granted is very enjoyable and entertaining! I also love the fact that you are quiet and peaceful during these videos! So many today think that they need to talk during the whole video, your content shows that just doing is enough! Much respect sir🤙🏽👍🏽
i really hope he secured the piston on the rod with something he didn't showed us, otherwise he will curse this bellows for constantly being self-disassembling
I'm honestly impressed as to how you used the feathers as a way to cover the gaps, much like a rubber oil ring would to an engine piston, as I thought that you used some sort of precision technology and lubricants to make the piston fit nicely yet move smoothly. And wow, it's actually a two-way pump! You did a smart way to use simple materials as a valve! Kudos to you! Super excited to see you upgrade by attaching it to a waterwheel using a shaft ('O U O' )
Amazing! I'm a bit worried about wear & tear on the inside (the feathers and the bamboo flaps) but I love the design and construction - reminds me of the heart actually, with how it's two parts that beat in turn to create flow in one direction. It's also interesting to see that your bellows create more pressure than PT's impeller design. I would've thought that it was the best you could do with natural resources, but I guess I should take shows like Dr Stone with a grain of salt haha. If you're going to try iron working again, just make sure to mix plant fibres in the mud/clay used for the furnace so it doesn't crack when drying and leak out heat.
I'm not convinced by that bellows. I'd imagine he'd have to do quite a few repairs after one smelting.. He'd be better off using leather if he wants it to last longer. Mind you, by the sound of it he's got a few spare chickens in the background...
Amazing. I made a piston box bellows in the Japanese style, but I bought pre cut sheets and screwed them together, using sealant to make everything air tight. It certainly is an efficient way to get air to the forge. I just use my arms to work it in the ol fashioned way. Thanks for the video.
You created quite a powerful bellow there. This will help in future metal-making-projects. I am very much looking forward to this action :). Everything you do is impressive. Keep at it friend.
@@valpage8221 No idea. Follow him yourself :). I know, how to make such a thing, but I never watched him do that kind of stuff. Because I think, he tries to be self-sufficient, I believe he (himself) hollowed out the wood off camera.
This guy is the post modern, modern, premodern, and renaissance contemporary of Leonardo Da Vinci! Love the videos man. Keep livin’ live free and simple for all us sinners.
I laughed because its happened to me before. Then I laughed even harder when he threw the handle, also been there before. Also very impressed that he kept that part in the video, not afraid to show something that failed, plus we got to see that it did not stop him at all.
Damn that’s cool! I didn’t read the title and I was wondering what in the world you were making, the feathers had me even more confused. But as soon as you used it on the fire, made complete sense. Can’t wait to see how your going to use now that you get more heat to your flame!
Hello, you genius of mankind evolution. first of all, I have a huge respect for what you do and what you did. everything is really amazing. but, i need to understand. how did you manage to get that perfect large wood tube you used to build your piston? how did you sculpted it? can't figure it out. I'm looking forward to see more of your videos, and looking forward to see you creating glass and a castle and primitiv internet. thanks for all, and those precious confinment video time.
I have seen you work very hard to get a unique product in the youtube channel. I think the next video you should shoot in close-up on how to operate it. Hope this will be a good support tool to create metal products to use to develop the farm better and faster 😀
Dang nice! I love the stuff you build.... I don't know if you really rough it through with those tools after the camera cuts, but the stuff you end up doing is amazing either way.
That stick near the end was the premiere multi tool of its day. You had a fire poker, meat thermometer, ruler, shit pot stirrer, attitude adjuster, and discipline stick all in one.
Holy shit this is an interesting video! I cant wait to see the new creations this bellows will spawn. Id love to meet the grandfather who taught him all this.
this is one of my favorites channels in this topic. It really makes me feel that I'm watching Dr. Stone in real life hahahaha. But I wonder, how long and stable that engine will be. I saw some others blowers maded only with wood and mud, witch looks simpler and looks like it have mod longevity too. But I'm not sure witch will do better for longer xD Anyway. Impressive job bro! Keep going!! Try to recreate Dr. Stone things too :D Like Senku Cola and Iamen
That's an interesting piston blower design! Before I got to this video I thought you made it a bit different - a shaft with two pistons, valves being incorporated in both sides and both pistons and only one outlet in the middle. But that would require two pistons and installing valves on pistons themselves, which might be harder
At first I agreed with you, but he made it better than Dr. Stone. He has higher air pressure and it blows when the piston moves either direction. I love these videos
Make a higher fireplace from clay to use this piston upwards. It would be more efficient that way and you can start smithing if any metals are nearby. I am glad you are producing content again. Take care.
When I was a kid in China, back in the late 70’s, I lived in the countryside and we had one of these things in our wood burning stove. It would be used to make the fire hotter so we could cook. No electric or gas stove.
when chopping into hard wood it's a good idea to have a wooden handle that is able to take the shock force, you can accomplish this a few ways, 1) make the handle a little thicker and longer and let gravity do most of the work otherwise the harder you swing the better the chance you will get a crack. 2) re-forge your axe to have a ring that goes around your handle instead of through it and wedge it on the top like modern axes do today, that way most of the shock stays within the axe head and less in the handle, also during the re-forge process make the axe head longer with a subtle curve and when you put it in the water for it's quench make sure that you only dunk the cutting edge and not the whole thing this way you have a really hard cutting edge and a softer spine that is able to take more shock force out of every swing, that's how modern axes are able to have wooden handles with really heavy duty axe heads, also make the handle longer and it won't hurt your hands as much. The easiest way you can make such a axe head without too much work is to make a mold in tightly packed sand and pour liquid steel into the mold, let it cool slowly then take it out while it's still fairly hot and just quench the cutting edge. Just make sure you have too much steel in your crucible rather than too little otherwise your pour will be incomplete. I'm a apprentice blacksmith who likes to make custom axes for tree cutting competitors, i'm not a master yet but what I have written here is how my master explained it to me, it's a lot harder than it sounds, even more so if you have to gather your own ore. hope this helped just in case you didn't know it already.
Alex Kirkpatrick think you missed the point of this being "primitive technology". Dude is in a forest smelting ore to make questionable quality pig iron, not steel. No anvil, no hammers, no drifts or swags.
@@KJ-kw7gh Not at all, primitive does not mean it has to be bad quality. after all if you want primitive then he should only be using rocks and sticks and no metal of any kind. Metal is a fairly advanced material and it has been used for thousands of years so if he's going to be using metal then he might as well take a note from Vikings who are the best at using axes due to them being a forest people and even they used my method. Now you don't need an anvil, hammers or drifts or swags to make an axe, that is a very labor intensive activity. and steel is made by introducing carbon to the iron billet or ore through the charcoal he made himself, also another fairly modern invention that dates back during Viking times and further so he himself is using things that are fairly recent. Smelting is as old as blacksmithing itself, you make a crucible out of a thick rock (oldest version I can recall) put ore inside cap it off with clay make sure to put some charcoal inside to help separate the slag from the ore, make a mold out of clay, fire it to make it stiff, pack sand around the mold tightly, carefully remove mold out of sand, take the crucible from the fire after a while and carefully pour the liquid metal into the mold and you can make yourself an axe with a rounded hoop for a handle. This is one of the most ancient ways to make tools that doesn't require a bunch of other tools to make it. From what I am seeing with his channel he is moving forward with his technology, he started off only using rocks and sticks to slowly incorporating more advanced technologies and techniques to help improve with productivity. The only logical step I see is that he will start incorporating even further advancements as he learns them.
Oŕson Cart haven't missed the point. All these "primitive" channels are fake. Entertainment. But in the context, he's showing what can be accomplished with minimal resources.
Alex Kirkpatrick in my shop, I use an anvil, hammer, and swags to make forge axe heads. Along with some more modern equipment. Don't school someone in metallurgy when you're not sure of it yourself. Non hafted socket axes like he has are some of the earliest examples of iron or bronze axes known.
@@orsoncart1021 The point was not missed at all, I was just offering insight on how things could be made better for him and anyone else who wishes to try something like this like the guy on the youtube channel (primitive technology) the original before all these other guys. Blacksmithing, Smelting and metallurgy is possible in these conditions if proper knowledge can be attained, something I wished to offer, Now I would like to believe that he actually utilizes these primitive skills like he does, I have tried to sharpen a stone into an axe head and it does work, you can do this, it took me 8 hours and 13 minutes to carve my axe head like they do, but my stone was granite, much harder to shape and the handle took me another hour and a half. and cutting a sapling that was three inches in diameter took me about 8 minutes, so it does work. "it is better to believe in an honest man, than it is in a corrupt world".
Good use of the feathers, but we're did the almost perfectly hollowed out log come from? Hummm? Did he build a primitive lathe and boreing bar in an episode I missed or something?
YOU know seh that the kiln a go fire up again. more iron fe mek. so good to finally see someone using feathers in their work. feathers could have so many primitive uses, and the amount of chickens, ducks and quails that these guys eat, it's amazing that feathers haven't make it's way into any primitive videos until now, except for fletching arrows.
wow, really impresive how you repaired and improved that piston, really creative, it would be cool findind a way to power it with water that up and down movement, that way you can rest.
Why didn't you notice how this long, round, hollow log was made? I watch all the videos from the beginning and was wondering how you made it. Why did you miss this episode? Perhaps this is also a big old bamboo?
I love how you never do the same thing twice and you always have new stuff to show us as always I'll like and share keep up with the grate videos
Ya like build 500 house with a pool dog bath o and the water slides just for living out in the wild I just don't get them guys
@@Chefchaot next video primitive technology:
1. Building new hut.
2. Make a brick
3. Make pottery from clay
4. Repeat all above untill years end
@@waddefaq4325 now that's funny I don't care who you are
Honestly haven't seen many grate videos, although they're all great videos even without grates!
You didn't write great correctly
Please dont stop uploading videos- so relaxing to watch you doing these great things!
thanks
the attention to detail is what really sets this guy apart from the rest. SS tier work my friend
Hey Primitive Skills, why don't you start a Patreon account? I've been watching your channel for two years now, and this is some quality content, i would happily support you.
You can donate via Paypal shown in his channel profile
Why would a primitive man need money? He lives off the forest.
@@humpty4205 to trade with other primitive men
I think I never saw you so happy and proud of something you made. This is awesome.
Impressive! This is so clever, and how relaxing... Thank you
@3:13 it’s pretty bad when he’s so pissed off at the ax handle stick breaking that he don’t even wanna use it as firewood 😂
with such a good bellows, maybe he will make a great smelter.
This is a smart guy ❤️❤️
Hope your knee is healing well... please be carefull! We cant miss you another 9 months! Welcome back!
My son and I are going to try and make one here with what we have available..and 10. 2. 1..some things from hardware stores. But none the less hardship times will be well met from All your videos Primitive Skills. Gardening..fish .even rice though in containers because of our very short growing seasons. We already have gingerroot started..and some test grains of prices. This is going to be Great Times even though my kids and I are older adults now. Our hearts will be much happier as I am at some point going to move on into that universal highway. Great Heart Loves. Moi from Maine USA.
Definitely the best bellow I've seen out of all primitive channel. Great work!
Where's the part where you hollow the big log?
I couldn't find it anywhere on your videos.
probs isnt because fro mthe looks of thing he does a lot of stuff with modern tools off camera
Thats easy. All you have to do is hollow out a tree trunk with a sharp stick, childs play!!!
@@chrismalcomson7640 not saying its hard, but whats the point of showing a video of making something if your just gonna leave out massive steps, (also looking at it it deffs looks like its been done with modern tools off camera, not that it can be done with his tools but im sure for the sake of a video not taking 2 months its been bored out, im mean look at how clean the bore is, esp the first few inches when the cap log goes. not way its been done with a crude iron axe or a sharp stick)
@@yareyare_dechi ruclips.net/video/nllCQvfOX-A/видео.html shows technique used for a different project.
It was termite eaten, you can tell if you look closely. It would have just needed smoothig with a sanding rock.
Skills and persistence are like the chicken and the egg. Productivity is bliss. We cannot all have the resources that this man has, but we can work with the materials at hand. This is ultimately what guides the progression. Working with your hands on your local materials will be rewarding. Promise.
Jeez, i cant tell how much i adore this ch.. any "underground castle for abadoned puppies with pool" meh... :D just pure technology! dont stop dude
I thoroughly enjoy your videos! Watching you do things that majority of people today cannot do and also take for granted is very enjoyable and entertaining! I also love the fact that you are quiet and peaceful during these videos! So many today think that they need to talk during the whole video, your content shows that just doing is enough! Much respect sir🤙🏽👍🏽
I laughed when he threw the broken axe handle into the jungle and then walked away... But wow, that's a powerful bellows.
I cant blame him really. I'd be rather pissed off too considering it takes close to an hour to make one with his methods.
These bellows are always surprising to me. Super powerful.
i really hope he secured the piston on the rod with something he didn't showed us, otherwise he will curse this bellows for constantly being self-disassembling
jSkrat Nyarlathotep It’s not difficult to secure it with a wedged mortise and tenon.
He pissed off
I love this channel! I learn something new every time and so peaceful to watch. Keep these great videos coming!
I'm honestly impressed as to how you used the feathers as a way to cover the gaps, much like a rubber oil ring would to an engine piston, as I thought that you used some sort of precision technology and lubricants to make the piston fit nicely yet move smoothly. And wow, it's actually a two-way pump! You did a smart way to use simple materials as a valve!
Kudos to you! Super excited to see you upgrade by attaching it to a waterwheel using a shaft ('O U O' )
What would attaching it to a water wheel shaft do? Automate it? It's already pretty simplistic to use.
Amazing! I'm a bit worried about wear & tear on the inside (the feathers and the bamboo flaps) but I love the design and construction - reminds me of the heart actually, with how it's two parts that beat in turn to create flow in one direction. It's also interesting to see that your bellows create more pressure than PT's impeller design. I would've thought that it was the best you could do with natural resources, but I guess I should take shows like Dr Stone with a grain of salt haha.
If you're going to try iron working again, just make sure to mix plant fibres in the mud/clay used for the furnace so it doesn't crack when drying and leak out heat.
Traditionally feathers or fur is used on similar box bellows, if anything the clay sealant would probably fail first, but it should last a good while.
I'm not convinced by that bellows. I'd imagine he'd have to do quite a few repairs after one smelting.. He'd be better off using leather if he wants it to last longer. Mind you, by the sound of it he's got a few spare chickens in the background...
This is truly amazing. Making something so flawlessly functional with such minimalist tools.
Well, with proper bellows, maybe he's preparing to take another shot at metal smelting?
That hearth on the comment proved it.
Smelting is hard work for little profit but it would be pretty cool.
@@BackByUnpopularDemand His first axe made by himself driven him here ! little profit ?
@@BackByUnpopularDemand Everything is hard on this channel!)))
The best primitive surv. Channel
Didn't think it would work so well. Well done Hui!
Welcome back missed you here..great video as always..very clever
I think your channel is the best of the ones about primitive technology, by far. Always so interesting to watch what clever thing are you gonna build.
Best primitive skills RUclips channel
Amazing. I made a piston box bellows in the Japanese style, but I bought pre cut sheets and screwed them together, using sealant to make everything air tight. It certainly is an efficient way to get air to the forge. I just use my arms to work it in the ol fashioned way. Thanks for the video.
Fuigo.... Sounds Filipino. I am glad to see that the Philippines are not completely Americanized. It's important to keep in touch with our roots.
You created quite a powerful bellow there. This will help in future metal-making-projects.
I am very much looking forward to this action :). Everything you do is impressive. Keep at it friend.
@@valpage8221 No idea. Follow him yourself :).
I know, how to make such a thing, but I never watched him do that kind of stuff.
Because I think, he tries to be self-sufficient, I believe he (himself) hollowed out the wood off camera.
@@valpage8221 No cable. No steel.
@@honeyblackman980 In what way are my comments trivial?
Nice job repairing the broken bellows you showed off on your other channel. Can’t wait till you start forging again.
This guy is the post modern, modern, premodern, and renaissance contemporary of Leonardo Da Vinci! Love the videos man. Keep livin’ live free and simple for all us sinners.
But how did you hollow that log so smoothly? It could not be done (accurately) with fire, neither with that small hatchet.
IMPRESSIVE! i could never thought such things could be put together for such appliances.
初めまして、日本から毎日 あなたの動画見てます🙋手先が器用で知識が豊富で 感心してます❗お体に気をつけて 続けて下さい。応援してます❗
Really enjoy watching you make useful things instead of just another pool in the woods video lol
As soon as I saw the word “piston” literally it took my breath away cause I just love mechanical stuff! xD
thanks brother, your knowledge is proving very useful to me
Never seen fuigo made from scratch... Thanks from Japan.
Hi💖💖
Yeah! You are there. I waited so long. Nice video! 2:31 😁
So many saw marks in this video. And how did you bore out that log?
This guy is awesome, seriously
❤️ Love from India 🇮🇳
I love your videos. Nothing fancy, but beautifully done and incredibly informative.
Really i love this series, make me imagine life at the jungle too 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
Anyone else say "uh oh" when the axe head flew off lol
I laughed way too hard at that!
I got the slide whistle sound effect in my head.
how did he get back so quick with a new handle? he must have backups on reserve.
I said "woopsie" out loud at that bit
I laughed because its happened to me before. Then I laughed even harder when he threw the handle, also been there before. Also very impressed that he kept that part in the video, not afraid to show something that failed, plus we got to see that it did not stop him at all.
Damn that’s cool! I didn’t read the title and I was wondering what in the world you were making, the feathers had me even more confused. But as soon as you used it on the fire, made complete sense. Can’t wait to see how your going to use now that you get more heat to your flame!
Hello, you genius of mankind evolution.
first of all, I have a huge respect for what you do and what you did. everything is really amazing.
but, i need to understand. how did you manage to get that perfect large wood tube you used to build your piston? how did you sculpted it? can't figure it out.
I'm looking forward to see more of your videos, and looking forward to see you creating glass and a castle and primitiv internet.
thanks for all, and those precious confinment video time.
Nice to see you back brother
I wish bamboo grew that big around where I live I can make everything with that.
The place you live is truly breathtaking.
I have seen you work very hard to get a unique product in the youtube channel. I think the next video you should shoot in close-up on how to operate it. Hope this will be a good support tool to create metal products to use to develop the farm better and faster 😀
Dang nice! I love the stuff you build.... I don't know if you really rough it through with those tools after the camera cuts, but the stuff you end up doing is amazing either way.
u ARE THE BEST AT THIS: nEVER STOP
l really enjoy every video you make your a good teacher, thanks for sharing what you know
Your videos are very educating.
Laughed my ass off when he threw the old axe handle away!
That stick near the end was the premiere multi tool of its day. You had a fire poker, meat thermometer, ruler, shit pot stirrer, attitude adjuster, and discipline stick all in one.
Have an amazing 2020 my friend you have a brilliant educational channel its a real shame they don't teach these skills in schools in the western world
I snort-laughed so hard when the ax head flew off.
Holy shit this is an interesting video! I cant wait to see the new creations this bellows will spawn. Id love to meet the grandfather who taught him all this.
Bravo mate! Well done! Pure genius
Interesting seeing basic machinery being made.
It looks like it is very well made i might add!
this is one of my favorites channels in this topic. It really makes me feel that I'm watching Dr. Stone in real life hahahaha. But I wonder, how long and stable that engine will be. I saw some others blowers maded only with wood and mud, witch looks simpler and looks like it have mod longevity too. But I'm not sure witch will do better for longer xD Anyway. Impressive job bro! Keep going!! Try to recreate Dr. Stone things too :D Like Senku Cola and Iamen
That's an interesting piston blower design! Before I got to this video I thought you made it a bit different - a shaft with two pistons, valves being incorporated in both sides and both pistons and only one outlet in the middle. But that would require two pistons and installing valves on pistons themselves, which might be harder
It’s like watching Dr Stone irl
At first I agreed with you, but he made it better than Dr. Stone. He has higher air pressure and it blows when the piston moves either direction. I love these videos
I want him make a cola
Lol, yups real life senku...
This is the smartest dude ever
Chào ad , bạn làm video rất hay va ý nghĩa.chúc ad sớm ra video mới.
How did you hollow the air chamber
Make a higher fireplace from clay to use this piston upwards. It would be more efficient that way and you can start smithing if any metals are nearby. I am glad you are producing content again. Take care.
Quá xuất sắc ! Cám ơn bạn đã tạo ra những vedeo thật bổ ích 😍
Nice job !
You could use it as a pump for tires too
That is a very nice bellows with a continuous air flow! Iron melting in next video?
22:20 Dynamite Plunger に見えます💣=3
does this mean Iron is the next step ? Congratulation, it's smart and, oh my god, all this work !
I always wait for your video. Thanks for the update.
That’s really impressive. You should make a water wheel and crank to power the bellow. Overall awesome video 👏
When I was a kid in China, back in the late 70’s, I lived in the countryside and we had one of these things in our wood burning stove. It would be used to make the fire hotter so we could cook. No electric or gas stove.
Would it be possible to have the monjolo connected to the piston bellow to have a slow, but, non-stop blower on your forge?
I missed your videos, they're amazing!!
Awesome work friend. Next you need to harness the water power to run the bellows
Are the roosters in the background screaming: "My feathers!!!!!" ?
You should build a windmill or water wheel to automate the process
hhhhhhhhhhhh wow amazing i love your video. im from morocco
Whats the groove on the outside for? Amazing job
when chopping into hard wood it's a good idea to have a wooden handle that is able to take the shock force, you can accomplish this a few ways, 1) make the handle a little thicker and longer and let gravity do most of the work otherwise the harder you swing the better the chance you will get a crack. 2) re-forge your axe to have a ring that goes around your handle instead of through it and wedge it on the top like modern axes do today, that way most of the shock stays within the axe head and less in the handle, also during the re-forge process make the axe head longer with a subtle curve and when you put it in the water for it's quench make sure that you only dunk the cutting edge and not the whole thing this way you have a really hard cutting edge and a softer spine that is able to take more shock force out of every swing, that's how modern axes are able to have wooden handles with really heavy duty axe heads, also make the handle longer and it won't hurt your hands as much. The easiest way you can make such a axe head without too much work is to make a mold in tightly packed sand and pour liquid steel into the mold, let it cool slowly then take it out while it's still fairly hot and just quench the cutting edge. Just make sure you have too much steel in your crucible rather than too little otherwise your pour will be incomplete. I'm a apprentice blacksmith who likes to make custom axes for tree cutting competitors, i'm not a master yet but what I have written here is how my master explained it to me, it's a lot harder than it sounds, even more so if you have to gather your own ore. hope this helped just in case you didn't know it already.
Alex Kirkpatrick think you missed the point of this being "primitive technology". Dude is in a forest smelting ore to make questionable quality pig iron, not steel. No anvil, no hammers, no drifts or swags.
@@KJ-kw7gh Not at all, primitive does not mean it has to be bad quality. after all if you want primitive then he should only be using rocks and sticks and no metal of any kind. Metal is a fairly advanced material and it has been used for thousands of years so if he's going to be using metal then he might as well take a note from Vikings who are the best at using axes due to them being a forest people and even they used my method. Now you don't need an anvil, hammers or drifts or swags to make an axe, that is a very labor intensive activity. and steel is made by introducing carbon to the iron billet or ore through the charcoal he made himself, also another fairly modern invention that dates back during Viking times and further so he himself is using things that are fairly recent. Smelting is as old as blacksmithing itself, you make a crucible out of a thick rock (oldest version I can recall) put ore inside cap it off with clay make sure to put some charcoal inside to help separate the slag from the ore, make a mold out of clay, fire it to make it stiff, pack sand around the mold tightly, carefully remove mold out of sand, take the crucible from the fire after a while and carefully pour the liquid metal into the mold and you can make yourself an axe with a rounded hoop for a handle. This is one of the most ancient ways to make tools that doesn't require a bunch of other tools to make it. From what I am seeing with his channel he is moving forward with his technology, he started off only using rocks and sticks to slowly incorporating more advanced technologies and techniques to help improve with productivity. The only logical step I see is that he will start incorporating even further advancements as he learns them.
Oŕson Cart haven't missed the point. All these "primitive" channels are fake. Entertainment. But in the context, he's showing what can be accomplished with minimal resources.
Alex Kirkpatrick in my shop, I use an anvil, hammer, and swags to make forge axe heads. Along with some more modern equipment. Don't school someone in metallurgy when you're not sure of it yourself. Non hafted socket axes like he has are some of the earliest examples of iron or bronze axes known.
@@orsoncart1021 The point was not missed at all, I was just offering insight on how things could be made better for him and anyone else who wishes to try something like this like the guy on the youtube channel (primitive technology) the original before all these other guys. Blacksmithing, Smelting and metallurgy is possible in these conditions if proper knowledge can be attained, something I wished to offer, Now I would like to believe that he actually utilizes these primitive skills like he does, I have tried to sharpen a stone into an axe head and it does work, you can do this, it took me 8 hours and 13 minutes to carve my axe head like they do, but my stone was granite, much harder to shape and the handle took me another hour and a half. and cutting a sapling that was three inches in diameter took me about 8 minutes, so it does work. "it is better to believe in an honest man, than it is in a corrupt world".
What type of tree did you get the tree sap/glue from?
Great job , love your videos . Thumbs up.
Hm... Amazing tool! Are you going to melt more iron?
Good use of the feathers, but we're did the almost perfectly hollowed out log come from? Hummm? Did he build a primitive lathe and boreing bar in an episode I missed or something?
What kind of tree did he carve the circles out of? That seems like some seriously strong stuff.
Классный ветродуй👍👍👍💥
Hope you will be able to do a new batch of iron melting soon with this bellow.
Clever concept.
Job well done, always interesting. Thanks for sharing your knowledge.
А где ты взял такой идеально круглый цилиндр и белую веревку, которой связывал перья?
YOU know seh that the kiln a go fire up again. more iron fe mek. so good to finally see someone using feathers in their work. feathers could have so many primitive uses, and the amount of chickens, ducks and quails that these guys eat, it's amazing that feathers haven't make it's way into any primitive videos until now, except for fletching arrows.
I really enjoy this alot thank you
Also something we all should know more just in case
Wow. Very nice idea man))
at 4:35: "I shall call you Log and we will be the best of friends"
In the LOG we trust.- every Naruto parody ever.
wow, really impresive how you repaired and improved that piston, really creative, it would be cool findind a way to power it with water that up and down movement, that way you can rest.
Impressive! next project is a water wheel to drive the piston?
How was the log hollowed out?